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Electronic Hearth: Creating an American Television Culture

Electronic Hearth: Creating an American Television Culture

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Electronic Hearth: Creating an American Television Culture

de Tichi, Cecelia

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ISBN 10
0195079140
ISBN 13
9780195079142
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Santa Barbara, California, United States
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Sobre este artículo

New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992. x, 249 pages, illustrations; 24 cm. Near fine. Tight, clean copy. Light edgewear to wraps. Another copy available. "We all talk about the 'tube' or 'box,' as if television were simply another appliance like the refrigerator or toaster oven. But Cecilia Tichi argues that TV is actually an environment--a pervasive screen-world that saturates almost every aspect of modern life. In Electronic Hearth, she looks at how that environment evolved, and how it, in turn, has shaped the American experience. Tichi explores almost fifty years of writing about television--in novels, cartoons, journalism, advertising, and critical books and articles--to define the role of television in the American consciousness. She examines early TV advertising to show how the industry tried to position the new device as not just a gadget but a prestigious new piece of furniture, a highly prized addition to the home. The television set, she writes, has emerged as a new electronic hearth--the center of family activity. John Updike described this 'primitive appeal of the hearth' in Roger's Version: 'Television is--its irresistable charm--a fire. Entering an empty room, we turn it on, and a talking face flares into being.' Sitting in front of the TV, Americans exist in a safety zone, free from the hostility and violence of the outside world. She also discusses long-standing suspicions of TV viewing: its often solitary, almost autoerotic character, its supposed numbing of the minds and imagination of children, and assertions that watching television drugs the minds of Americans. Television has been seen as treacherous territory for public figures, from generals to presidents, where satire and broadcast journalism often deflate their authority. And the print culture of journalism and book publishing has waged a decades-long war of survival against it--only to see new TV generations embrace both the box and the book as a part of their cultural world. In today's culture, she writes, we have become 'teleconscious'--Seeing, for example, real life being certified through television ('as seen on TV'), and television constantly ratified through its universal presence in art, movies, music, comic strips, fabric prints, and even references to TV on TV. Ranging far beyond the bounds of the broadcast industry, Tichi provides a history of contemporary American culture, a culture defined by the television environment. Intensively researched and insightfully written, The Electronic Hearth offers a new understanding of a critical, but much-maligned, aspect of modern life. / Cecelia Tichi is William R. Kenan, Jr., Professor of English at Vanderbilt University. She is the author of Shifting Gears: Technology, Literature, and Culture in Modernist America and New World, New Earth: Environmental Reform in American Literature from Puritans to Whitman." - Publisher. CONTENTS: Television Environment; A Preface; Introduction; Phasing In; Electronic Hearth; Peep Show, Private Sector; Leisure, Labor, and the La-Z-Boy; Drugs, Backtalk, and Teleconsciousness; Certification; As Seen on TV; Videoportraits and Authority; Two Cultures and the Battle by the Books; The Child; A Television Allegory; Comics, Movies, Music, Stories, Art, TV-on-TV, Etc.. Paperback. Very Good. 8vo.

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Detalles

Librería
LEFT COAST BOOKS US (US)
Inventario del vendedor #
047801
Título
Electronic Hearth: Creating an American Television Culture
Autor
Tichi, Cecelia
Formato/Encuadernación
Tapa blanda
Estado del libro
Usado - Muy bueno
ISBN 10
0195079140
ISBN 13
9780195079142
Editorial
Oxford University Press
Lugar de publicación
New York and Oxford
Fecha de publicación
1992
Tamaño
8vo
Catálogos del vendedor
Film, TV, & Video / TV / History & Criticism;

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