Research Catalog

Smoke and mirrors : violence, television, and other American cultures

Title
Smoke and mirrors : violence, television, and other American cultures / John Leonard.
Author
Leonard, John.
Publication
New York : New Press : Distributed by Norton, 1997.

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TextRequest in advance PN1992.6 .L46 1997Off-site
TextRequest in advance PN1992.6 .L46 1997Off-site

Details

Description
290 pages; 21 cm
Summary
  • Smoke and Mirrors is a passionate, richly nuanced work that shows television as a circus, a wishing well, and a cure for loneliness. Ranging from Ed Sullivan to cyberspace, from kid shows to cable, and from the cheap thrills of "action adventure" to the solemn boredom of PBS pledge week, Leonard argues for a whole new way of thinking about television.
  • For Leonard, the situation comedy is a socializing agency, the talk show is a legitimating agency, the made-for-television movie is the last redoubt of social conscience, and television criticism itself is the last refuge of time-serving thugs and postmodernists.
  • Instead of scapegoating television as the cause of crime in our streets, stupidity in our schools, and spectacle rather than substance in our government, Leonard sees something else inside the box: an echo chamber and a feedback loop, a medium neither wholly innocent of nor entirely responsible for the frantic disorder it brings into our homes.
Subject
Contents
Introduction: Why Are We Meeting Like This? -- Ed Sullivan Died for Our Sins -- Family Values, Like the House of Atreus -- Pulp Fiction -- Crime and Punishment -- Social Diseases -- A Choice of Elsewheres -- News From Nowhere.
ISBN
156584226X
LCCN
96029421
OCLC
  • 35229133
  • ocm35229133
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries