Invisible crises : what conglomerate control of media means for America and the world
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Invisible crises : what conglomerate control of media means for America and the world
(Critical studies in communication and in the cultural industries)
Westview Press, 1996
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
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ISBN 9780813320717
Description
According to the contributors to this volume, the communications media deliberately blank out critical conditions and developments whose imagery would pose unacceptable challenges to the dominant structures of culture-power. Such "invisible crises" include the suppression of information about the dehumanization and stigmatization of groups of people; the drift toward ecological suicide; the neglect of vital institutions such as public education and the arts; the way in which television corrupts the electoral process; and the promotion of practices which drug, poison and kill. The book asks why the media are, in the view of contributors, withholding vital information from the public, and focuses on the increasing concentration of culture-power that, it is argued, keeps these truths from public view.
Table of Contents
- Part 1 Total control: brave new world minus 400, Ben Bagdikian
- information deprivation in an information-rich society, Herbert I. Schiller
- the hidden side of television violence, George Gerbner
- speaking volumes - the book-publishing oligopoly and its cultural consequences, Leah Binder. Part 2 Technocratic fantasies: computer-assisted crimes, Rick Crawford
- freedom, fun and fundamentals - defining digital progress in a democratic society, Nicholas Johnson. Part 3 Gaps that divide us: writing about poverty in the age of plenty, Stanley Meisler
- race relations in the suburbs, Rosalyn Baxandall and Elizabeth Ewen
- national amnesia, cultural Darwinism and the pursuit of power, or what Americans don't know about Indians, Jerry Mander. Part 4 Global fault lines: beaches without bases, Sue Curry Jansen
- the new world intellectual order, Johan Galtung
- whose whispers in the gallery?, Erskine B. Childers
- the crisis of political legitimacy and the Muslim world, Hamid Mowlana
- the crisis of mobility, Nancy Snow. Part 5 The new tyrannies: "let them eat pollution", John Bellamy Foster
- the silent war - debt and Africa, Jill Hills
- global drug scourge - the hidden story, Stephen E. Flynn.
- Volume
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: pbk ISBN 9780813320724
Description
Hidden from public sight and mind today are invisible crises that threaten our democracy and existence more than the crises we know about?or think we know about. These invisible crises include the promotion of practices that drug, hurt, poison, and kill thousands every day; cults of violence that desensitize, terrorize, and brutalize; the growing siege mentality of our cities; widening resource gaps and the most glaring inequalities in the industrial world; the costly neglect of vital institutions such as public education and the arts; and media-assisted make-believe image politics corrupting the electoral process.Deprived of sustained attention but bombarded by eruptions of surface consequences (often presented as unique events stripped of historical context), people ar bewildered, fearful, angry, and cynical.The contributors to this volume?exploring such unattended crises, analyzing why they are hidden, and focusing on the increasing concentration of culture-power that keeps them from view?maintain that a profound general crisis of social vision, public communication, and representative government underlies all of the invisible crises.
Table of Contents
- Part 1 Total control: brave new world minus 400, Ben Bagdikian
- information deprivation in an information-rich society, Herbert I. Schiller
- the hidden side of television violence, George Gerbner
- speaking volumes - the book-publishing oligopoly and its cultural consequences, Leah Binder. Part 2 Technocratic fantasies: computer-assisted crimes, Rick Crawford
- freedom, fun and fundamentals - defining digital progress in a democratic society, Nicholas Johnson. Part 3 Gaps that divide us: writing about poverty in the age of plenty, Stanley Meisler
- race relations in the suburbs, Rosalyn Baxandall and Elizabeth Ewen
- national amnesia, cultural Darwinism and the pursuit of power, or what Americans don't know about Indians, Jerry Mander. Part 4 Global fault lines: beaches without bases, Sue Curry Jansen
- the new world intellectual order, Johan Galtung
- whose whispers in the gallery?, Erskine B. Childers
- the crisis of political legitimacy and the Muslim world, Hamid Mowlana
- the crisis of mobility, Nancy Snow. Part 5 The new tyrannies: "let them eat pollution", John Bellamy Foster
- the silent war - debt and Africa, Jill Hills
- global drug scourge - the hidden story, Stephen E. Flynn.
by "Nielsen BookData"