Book Read Free

Amusing Ourselves to Death

Page 19

by Neil Postman


  Chapter 3: Typographic America

  1 Franklin, p. 175.

  2 Hart, p. 8.

  3 Hart, p. 8.

  4 Hart, p. 8.

  5 Hart, p. 15.

  6 Lockridge, p. 184.

  7 Lockridge, p. 184.

  8 Hart, p. 47.

  9 Mumford, p. 136.

  10 Stone, p. 42.

  11 Hart, p. 31.

  12 Boorstin, p. 315.

  13 Boorstin, p. 315.

  14 Hart, p. 39.

  15 Hart, p. 45.

  16 Fast, p. x (in Introduction).

  17 This press was not the first established on the American continent. The Spanish had established a printing office in Mexico a hundred years earlier.

  18 Mott, p. 7.

  19 Boorstin, p. 320.

  20 Mott, p. 9.

  21 Lee, p. 10.

  22 Boorstin, p. 326.

  23 Boorstin, p. 327.

  24 Hart, p. 27.

  25 Tocqueville, p. 58.

  26 Tocqueville, pp. 5-6.

  27 Hart, p. 86.

  28 Curti, pp. 353-354.

  29 Hart, p. 153.

  30 Hart, p. 74.

  31 Curti, p. 337.

  32 Hart, p. 102.

  33 Berger, p. 183.

  34 Curti, p. 356.

  35 Berger, p. 158.

  36 Berger, p. 158.

  37 Berger, p. 158.

  38 Curti, p. 356.

  39 Twain, p. 161.

  40 Hofstadter, p. 145.

  41 Hofstadter, p. 19.

  42 Tocqueville, p. 260.

  43 Miller, p. 269.

  44 Miller, p. 271.

  45 Marx, p. 150.

  Chapter 4: The Typographic Mind

  1 Sparks, p. 4.

  2 Sparks, p. 11.

  3 Sparks, p. 87.

  4 Questions were continuously raised about the accuracy of the transcriptions of these debates, Robert Hitt was the verbatim reporter for the debates, and he was accused of repairing Lincoln’s “illiteracies.” The accusations were made, of course, by Lincoln’s political enemies, who, perhaps, were dismayed by the impression Lincoln’s performances were making on the country. Hitt emphatically denied he had “doctored” any of Lincoln’s speeches.

  5 Hudson, p. 5.

  6 Sparks, p. 86.

  7 Mill, p. 64.

  8 Hudson, p. 110.

  9 Paine, p. 6.

  10 Hudson, p. 132.

  11 Perry Miller, p. 15.

  12 Hudson, p. 65.

  13 Hudson, p. 143.

  14 Perry Miller, p. 119.

  15 Perry Miller, p. 140.

  16 Perry Miller, pp. 140-141.

  17 Perry Miller, p. 120.

  18 Perry Miller, p. 153.

  19 Presbrey, p. 244.

  20 Presbrey, p. 126.

  21 Presbrey, p. 157.

  22 Presbrey, p. 235.

  23 Anderson, p. 17. In this connection, it is worth citing a letter, dated January 15, 1787, written by Thomas Jefferson to Monsieur de Crève-coeur. In his letter, Jefferson complained that the English were trying to claim credit for an American invention: making the circumference of a wheel out of one single piece of wood. Jefferson speculated that Jersey farmers learned how to do this from their reading of Homer, who described the process clearly. The English must have copied the procedure from Americans, Jefferson wrote, “because ours are the only farmers who can read Homer.”

  Chapter 5: The Peek-a-Boo World

  1 Thoreau, p. 36.

  2 Harlow, p. 100.

  3 Czitrom, pp. 15-16.

  4 Sontag, p. 165:

  5 Newhall, p. 33.

  6 Salomon, p. 36.

  7 Sontag, p. 20.

  8 Sontag, p. 20.

  Chapter 6: The Age of Show Business

  1 On July 20, 1984, The New York Times reported that the Chinese National Television network had contracted with CBS to broadcast sixty-four hours of CBS programming in China. Contracts with NBC and ABC are sure to follow. One hopes that the Chinese understand that such transactions are of great political consequence. The Gang of Four is as nothing compared with the Gang of Three.

  2 This story was carried by several newspapers, including the Wisconsin State Journal, February 24, 1983, Section 4, p. 2.

  3 As quoted in The New York Times, June 7, 1984, Section A, p. 20.

  Chapter 7: “Now... This”

  1 For a fairly thorough report on Ms. Craft’s suit, see The New York Times, July 29, 1983.

  2 MacNeil, p. 2.

  3 MacNeil, p. 4.

  4 See Time, July 9, 1984, p. 69.

  Chapter 8: Shuffle Off to Bethlehem

  1 Graham, pp. 5-8. For a detailed analysis of Graham’s style, see Michael Real’s Mass Mediated Culture. For an amusing and vitriolic one, see Roland Barthes’ “Billy Graham at the Winter Cyclodome,” in The Eiffel Tower and Other Mythologies. Barthes says, “If God really does speak through the mouth of Dr. Graham, then God is a real blockhead.”

  2 As quoted in “Religion in Broadcasting,” by Robert Abelman and Kimberly Neuendorf, p. 2. This study was funded by a grant from Unda-USA, Washington, D.C.

  3 Armstrong, p. 137.

  4 Arendt, p. 352.

  Chapter 9: Reach Out and Elect Someone

  1 Drew, p. 263.

  2 Moran, p. 122.

  3 Rosen, p. 162.

  4 Quoted from a speech given on March, 27, 1984, at the Jewish Museum in New York City on the occasion of a conference of the National Jewish Archive of Broadcasting.

  5 Moran, p. 125.

  6 From a speech given at the twenty-fourth Media Ecology Conference, April 26, 1982, in Saugerties, New York. For a full account of Dean Gerbner’s views, see “Television: The New State Religion,” Et cetera 34:2 (June, 1977): 145-150.

  Chapter 10: Teaching as an Amusing Activity

  1 Dewey, p. 48.

  2 G. Comstock, S. Chaffee, N. Katzman, M. McCombs, and D. Roberts, Television and Human Behavior (New York: Columbia University Press, 1978).

  3 A. Cohen and G. Salomon, “Children’s Literate Television Viewing : Surprises and Possible Explanations,” Journal of Communication 29 (1979): 156-163; L. M. Meringoff, “What Pictures Can and Can’t Do for Children’s Story Comprehension,” paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association, April, 1982; J. Jacoby, W. D. Hoyer and D. A. Sheluga, Miscomprehension of Televised Communications (New York: The Educational Foundation of the American Association of Advertising Agencies, 1980); J. Stauffer, R. Frost and W. Rybolt, “Recall and Learning from Broadcast News: Is Print Better?,” Journal of Broadcasting (Summer, 1981): 253-262; A. Stem, “A Study for the National Association for Broadcasting,” in M. Barret (ed.), The Politics of Broadcasting, 1971-1972 (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1973); C. E. Wilson, “The Effect of a Medium on Loss of Information,” Journalism Quarterly 51 (Spring, 1974): 111-115; W. R. Neuman, “Patterns of Recall Among Television News Viewers,” Public Opinion Quarterly 40 (1976): 118-125; E. Katz, H. Adoni and P. Parness, “Remembering the News: What the Pictures Add to Recall,” Journalism Quarterly 54 (1977): 233-242; B. Gunter, “Remembering Television News: Effects of Picture Content,” Journal of General Psychology 102 (1980): 127-133.

  4 Salomon, p. 81.

  Bibliography

  Anderson, Paul. Platonism in the Midwest. Philadelphia: Temple University Publications, 1963.

  Arendt, Hannah. “Society and Culture,” in The Human Dialogue, edited by Floyd Matson and Ashley Montagu. Glencoe, Ill.: Free Press, 1967.

  Armstrong, Ben. The Electric Church. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1979.

  Berger, Max. The British Traveler in America, 1836-1860. New York: Columbia University Press, 1943.

  Boorstin, Daniel J. The Americans: The Colonial Experience. New York: Vintage Books, 1958.

  Cassirer, Ernst. An Essay on Man. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday Anchor, 1956.

  Curti, Merle. The Growth of American Thought. New York: Harper & Row, 1951.

 
Czitrom, Daniel. Media and the American Mind: From Morse to McLuhan. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1982.

  Dewey, John. Experience and Education. The Kappa Delta Pi Lectures. London: Collier Books, 1963.

  Drew, Elizabeth. Portrait of an Election: The 1980 Presidential Campaign. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1981.

  Eisenstein, Elizabeth. The Printing Press as an Agent of Change. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1979.

  Fast, Howard. Introduction to Rights of Man, by Thomas Paine. New York: Heritage Press, 1961.

  Franklin, Benjamin. The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin. New York: Magnum Books, 1968.

  Frye, Northrop. The Great Code: The Bible and Literature. Toronto: Academic Press, 1981.

  Graham, Billy. “The Future of TV Evangelism.” TV Guide 31:10 (1983).

  Harlow, Alvin Fay. Old Wires and New Waves: The History of the Telegraph, Telephone and Wireless. New York: Appleton-Century, 1936.

  Hart, James D. The Popular Book: A History of America’s Literary Taste. New York: Oxford University Press, 1950.

  Hofstadter, Richard. Anti-Intellectualism in American Life. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1964.

  Hudson, Winthrop. Religion in America. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1965.

  Lee, James Melvin. History of American Journalism. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1917.

  Lockridge, Kenneth. “Literacy in Early America, 1650-1800,” in Literacy and Social Development in the West: A Reader, edited by Harvey J. Graff. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1981.

  MacNeil, Robert. “Is Television Shortening Our Attention Span?” New York University Education Quarterly 14:2 (Winter, 1983).

  Marx, Karl, and Friedrich Engels. The German Ideology. New York: International Publishers, 1972.

  Mill, John Stuart. Autobiography and Other Writings. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1969.

  Miller, John C. The First Frontier: Life in Colonial America. New York: Dell, 1966.

  Miller, Perry. The Life of the Mind in America: From the Revolution to the Civil War. New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, 1965.

  Moran, Terence. “Politics 1984: That’s Entertainment.” Et cetera 41:2 (Summer, 1984).

  Mott, Frank Luther. American Journalism: A History of Newspapers in the U.S. through 260 Years, 1690 to 1950. New York: Macmillan, 1950.

  Mumford, Lewis. Technics and Civilization. New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, 1934.

  Newhall, Beaumont. The History of Photography from 1839 to the Present Day. New York: Museum of Modem Art, 1964.

  Ong, Walter. “Literacy and the Future of Print.” Journal of Communication 30:1 (Winter, 1980).

  Ong, Walter. Orality and Literacy. New York: Methuen, 1982.

  Paine, Thomas. The Age of Reason. New York: Peter Eckler Publishing Co., 1919.

  Presbrey, Frank. The History and Development of Advertising. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1929.

  Rosen, Jay. “Advertising’s Slow Suicide.” Et cetera 41:2 (Summer, 1984).

  Salomon, Gavriel. Interaction of Media, Cognition and Learning. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1979.

  Sontag, Susan. On Photography. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1977.

  Sparks, Edwin Erle, ed. The Lincoln-Douglas Debates of 1858. Vol. I. Springfield, Ill.: Illinois State Historical Library, 1908.

  Stone, Lawrence. “The Educational Revolution in England, 1500—1640.” Past and Present 28 (July, 1964).

  Thoreau, Henry David. Walden. Riverside Editions. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1957.

  Tocqueville, Alexis de. Democracy in America. New York: Vintage Books, 1954.

  Twain, Mark. The Autobiography of Mark Twain. New York: Harper and Bros., 1959.

  Index

  ABC network movie The Day After, and post-show discussion

  advertising: newspaper, history of ; political; television commercials

  Agassiz, Louis

  Age of Reason

  Age of Reason, The (Paine)

  American Mercury

  American Spelling Book (Webster)

  Analects (Confucius)

  Anderson, Paul

  Arendt, Hannah

  Areopagitica (Milton)

  Aristotle

  Associated Press

  Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin (Franklin)

  auto industry

  Bakker, Jim

  Baltimore Patriot

  Baptists

  Barthes, Roland

  Bay Psalm Book

  Beecher, Henry Ward

  Bennett, James

  Bible

  “Bonanza” (TV show)

  book censorship

  Boorstin, Daniel; The Image

  Boston

  Boston Gazette

  Boston News-Letter.

  Brave New World (Huxley)

  British Broadcasting Corporation

  Brokaw, Tom

  Bruner, Jerome

  Buckley, William

  Bunn, Alfred

  Burns, George

  capitalism

  Carlyle, Thomas

  Carter, Jimmy

  Cassirer, Ernst

  Catholicism

  Cavett, Dick

  CBS network

  censorship

  “Cheers” (TV show)

  Chicago

  Children’s Television Workshop

  Cicero

  cities, as metaphors of national character

  Clark, Ramsey

  clocks

  college: commencements, televised ; 19th-century

  Colonial America, typography in

  Commager, Henry Steele

  commercials. See television commercials

  Common Sense (Paine)

  computers

  confessionals, televised

  Confucius, Analects

  Congregationalists

  Constitution, U.S.

  conversation

  “Cosmos” (TV series)

  Coswell, Henry

  court trials, televised

  Craft, Christine

  Cronkite, Walter

  crossword puzzles

  Daguerre, Louis

  daguerreotype

  Daily News

  “Dallas” (TV show)

  Day After, The (ABC movie), and post-show discussion

  debates: Lincoln-Douglas

  ; 1984 presidential

  Decalogue

  Deism

  Democracy in America (Tocqueville)

  Department of Education

  Description of New England (Smith)

  Dewey John; Experience and Education

  Dickens, Charles

  Dickinson, Emily

  Dietrich, Dr. Edward

  “Diff’rent Strokes” (TV show)

  Dirksen, Everett

  doctoral oral

  Douglas, Stephen A.

  Dryden, John, Fables

  Duché, Jacob

  Dukakis, Mike

  Dunkers

  Dwight, Timothy

  “Dynasty” (TV show)

  education: Colonial; to control television; 19th-century ; as television entertainment; “The Voyage of the Mimi” programs, discussed

  Edwards, Jonathan; Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God in the Conversion of Many Hundred Souls in Northhampton; A Treatise Concerning Religious Affections

  18th-century religion and typography

  Einstein, Albert

  elderly, and television

  “The Electric Company” (TV show)

  electricity

  Emerson, Ralph Waldo

  Empire of Reason

  England

  entertainment; education as ; modem cities as; politics as; television as

  “Entertainment Tonight” (TV show)

  Episcopalians

  epistemology, media as

  Ervin, Sam

  Essay Concerning Human Understanding (Locke)

  Experience and Education (Dewey)

  eyeglasses, invention of

  “Eye-
Witness News” (TV show)

  Fables (Dryden)

  Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God in the Conversion of Many Hundred Souls in Northhampton (Edwards)

  Falwell, Jerry

  Faulkner, William

  Federal Communications Act

  Federalist Papers (Publius)

  film

  Finney, Charles

  “Firing Line” (TV show)

  Fitzgerald, F. Scott

  Ford, Gerald

  Ford, Henry

  Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television (Mander)

  Franklin, Benjamin

  Franklin, James

  Frelinghuysen, Theodore

  Freud, Sigmund

  Frye, Nonhrop

  Galileo

  Gerbner, George

  German Ideology, The (Marx)

  Goodrich, Samuel

  Goody, Jack

  Graham, Billy

  Great Awakening

  Greece, Classical; book censorship in; rhetoric in

  Greeley, Horace

  Guardian (Steele)

  “Gunsmoke” (TV show)

  Hamilton, Alexander

  Harris, Benjamin

  Harvard University

  Havelock, Eric

  Hawthorne, Nathaniel

  Hemingway, Ernest

  Henry VIII, King of England

  Herschel, John F. W.

  Heyman, John

  History and Development of Advertising, The (Presbrey)

  Hoffman, David

  Hofstadter, Richard

  Holbrook, Josiah

  Homer (Pope)

  Horn, Steve

  Huxley, Aldous ; Brave New World

  illuminated manuscripts

  Image, The (Boorstin)

  Index Librorum Prohibitorum

  Iranian hostage crisis

  Jackson, Jesse

  Japan

  Javits, Jacob

  Jay, John

  Jaynes, Julian

  Jefferson, Thomas

  Jews

  Johnston, J. R W.

  Kennedy, Edward

  Kennedy, John F.

  Kent, James

  Kissinger, Henry

  Koch, Edward

  “Kojak” (TV show)

  Koppel, Ted

  Las Vegas

  “Laugh-In” (TV show)

  lecture hallsh-century

 

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