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This is a collection of essays about the media, the environment,
and the whole of humanity at the brink of extinction. As the
demands of overpopulation and of an unsustainable consumer economy
dry up existing natural resources and destroy vital ecosystems that
we need to survive, the corporate-controlled media saturate
worldwide audiences with a barrage of hypnotic images and
narratives to stimulate over-consumption and to distract us from
the consequences of rampant consumerism, while remaining silent
about the systematic destruction of the environment and our future.
Academicians from the across the sciences, the social sciences, the
arts, and the humanities engage in an interdisciplinary discussion
informed by a vision of an interconnected humanity and focused on
the role of the media in forging public discourse. Contributors to
the collection argue that today's media are failing humanity.
Rather than providing pictures of reality on which the world's
citizens can act, the corporate-controlled media are widely used as
instruments of commercial and political propaganda, creating an
immense web of images and narratives that their creators know to be
not true--fabrications designed to sell, to manipulate, in a sense
to enslave worldwide audiences. At the core of the discussion in
this book is a utopian vision of one unified humanity-billions of
people whose destinies and dreams are imbricated and
interdependent, and who share the same world, the same habitats. It
is a vision of a world that cherishes diversity but is also
united-a world where our differences are no longer a cause for
conflict and where separate countries or separate ethnic or
religious communities no longer have to compete or wage war to
exploit available resources. As extensions of humans, the media can
be instruments of salvation instead of destruction, liberation
instead of oppression. But first, we must recognize the challenges
we face.
This is a collection of essays about the media, the environment,
and the whole of humanity at the brink of extinction. As the
demands of overpopulation and of an unsustainable consumer economy
dry up existing natural resources and destroy vital ecosystems that
we need to survive, the corporate-controlled media saturate
worldwide audiences with a barrage of hypnotic images and
narratives to stimulate over-consumption and to distract us from
the consequences of rampant consumerism, while remaining silent
about the systematic destruction of the environment and our future.
Academicians from the across the sciences, the social sciences, the
arts, and the humanities engage in an interdisciplinary discussion
informed by a vision of an interconnected humanity and focused on
the role of the media in forging public discourse. Contributors to
the collection argue that today's media are failing humanity.
Rather than providing pictures of reality on which the world's
citizens can act, the corporate-controlled media are widely used as
instruments of commercial and political propaganda, creating an
immense web of images and narratives that their creators know to be
not true--fabrications designed to sell, to manipulate, in a sense
to enslave worldwide audiences. At the core of the discussion in
this book is a utopian vision of one unified humanity-billions of
people whose destinies and dreams are imbricated and
interdependent, and who share the same world, the same habitats. It
is a vision of a world that cherishes diversity but is also
united-a world where our differences are no longer a cause for
conflict and where separate countries or separate ethnic or
religious communities no longer have to compete or wage war to
exploit available resources. As extensions of humans, the media can
be instruments of salvation instead of destruction, liberation
instead of oppression. But first, we must recognize the challenges
we face.
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