Talking tombstones and other tales of the media age

書誌事項

Talking tombstones and other tales of the media age

Gary Gumpert

Oxford University Press, 1987

  • alk. paper
  • pbk

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 6

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注記

Includes index

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

ISBN 9780195038118

内容説明

What has the omnipresence of the telephone done to interpersonal communication? How has the portable radio/tape player--whether "Walkman" or "box"--challenged our notions of privacy and personal space? What happens to our aesthetic ideals when an ancient art treasure is moved to a pollution-free environment and an exact replica is put in its place at the original site? How has the use of the "instant replay" in sports broadcasting affected the value of sportsmanship? What are the implications of the fact that a computer engineer has begun to market a tombstone that can deliver a recorded message from the deceased to the survivors? These are but a few of the questions Gary Gumpert asks in this provocative and entertaining assessment of how the communications media and its related technology have altered, reinforced, deemphasized, and redefined our society's values and beliefs. In a world and a society less reliant on the media, values were generally resolved and taught through the traditional institutions of family, school, and church. As Gumpert notes, however, the coming of the electronic age has made us much more reliant on "media relationships" for support and reaction in defining our values. Uncovering hidden media dependencies we tend to suppress, the book abounds in original insights on topics ranging from the intrusion of Muzak into the doctor-patient relationship to the way new audio technology has transformed our perceptions of a great performance. Although values tend to endure, Gumpert observes, they have never been static or constant. With the advent of the new media, he contends, values are being "rocked and tested" at a rate that boggles the mind. This book is a lively meditation on where we have been and where we might be going.
巻冊次

pbk ISBN 9780195056518

内容説明

Gary Gumpert's provocative and entertaining study assesses how the communications media and their related technology have altered, reinforced, de-emphasized, and redefined our society's values and beliefs. Gumpert argues that the coming of the electronic age has made us much more reliant on "media relationships" in defining our values than in previous times when we resolved and taught our values through the traditional institutions of family, school, and church. Uncovering often-hidden media dependencies, Gumpert discusses topics ranging from the intrusion of Muzak into the doctor-patient relationship to the way new audio technology has transformed our perceptions of a great performance. Observing how the advent of the new media has "rocked and tested" our values, he offers a lively meditation on where we have been and where we might be going.

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