Lost in Media

The Ethics of Everyday Life
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327 g
Format:
225x150x13 mm
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Benjamin Frymer (PhD in Sociology from UCLA)is assistant professor of sociology in the Hutchins School of Liberal Studies, Sonoma State University. He has co-edited the books, Cultural Studies, Education, and Youth: Beyond Schools (2011) and Hollywood's Exploited: Public Pedagogy, Corporate Movies, and Cultural Crisis (2010).
Tony Kashani (PhD in Humanities from California Institute of Integral Studies) is a faculty member in the Liberal Arts Department of Brandman University of Chapman University Systems. Aside from many scholarly articles, Dr. Kashani is the author of two editions of Deconstructing the Mystique: An Interdisciplinary Introduction to Cinema (2005, 20009) a textbook used at various universities in the US. He is also the co-editor and contributor of Hollywood's Exploited: Public Pedagogy, Corporate Movies, and Cultural Crisis.
Lost in Media examines collectively the ethical issues that have arisen in media-driven everyday life and will that arise as paradigm shifts occur on a global scale. Chapters in the book use critical theory to look at issues of free market fundamentalism, journalism's erosion of communication of truth, yielding self-censorship in the media, music and morality, and much more.
Exklusives Verkaufsrecht für: Gesamte Welt.
Contents: Tony Kashani/Benjamin Frymer: From Benetton to Murdoch: The Culture of Money, Shock, and Schlock - Henry A. Giroux: We Are All in This Thing Together: The Complex Ethics of Social Media Networking - Tony Kashani: Ritalin: Panic in the USA - Toby Miller: The Murdoch Media Empire, Journalistic Ethics,and the Spectacle of Scandal - Douglas Kellner: Media and Ethics: The Public Sphere, Truth Telling, and Practice of Freedom - Ali Kashani: Alienation in the Age of Spectacle Culture - Benjamin Frymer: Neoliberal Media's Commodification of Occupy Wall Street and Radical Social Movements - Brian Klocke: With No Responsibility: The Colbert Show - Jjenna Hupp Andrews: The Devil Is in the Details: Christian Messages Gliding Unseen Within Deep Blue Sea - Ajay Gehlawat: Why Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle: The Representation of Otherness in Mainstream Teen Cinema - Kimberly M. Radek: No-Win Avatar: Culture Clash in Pocahontas Revisited.
Lost in Media examines collectively the ethical issues that have arisen in media-driven everyday life and will that arise as paradigm shifts occur on a global scale. Films, television and the new media often serve the globalization aims of a capitalist society as they function to socially reproduce the hegemonic norms, values, and styles of the larger society. Chapters in the book use the tradition of critical theory to look at issues of free market fundamentalism, journalism's erosion of communication of truth, public relations ethics of perception management; yielding self-censorship in the media, entertainment media pedagogically cultivating consumerism and docility, music and morality, misrepresentation of resistance movements, ethics of spectatorship, and the transformation of everyday ethics.

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