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Coarseness in U. S. Public Communication

Authors:
Publisher:
 2012

Summary

Public expression in the United States has become increasingly coarse. Whether it’s stupid, rude, base, or anti-intellectual talk, it surrounds us. Popular television, film, music, art, and even some elements of religion have become as coarse, we argue, as our often-disparaged political dialogue. This book’s contention is that the U.S. semantic environment is governed by tactics, not tact. We craft messages that work—that perform their desired function. We are instrumental, strategic communicators. As such, entertainment and journalism that draw an audience, for instance, are “good.” This follows the logic that the marketplace, an aggregate of hedonically motivated individuals, decides what’s good. Market logic, when unencumbered by what some characterize as quaint human sentimentalities, liberates us to cynically communicate whatever and however we want. Whatever improves ratings, web traffic, ticket sales, concession sales, repeat purchases, and earnings is good. Embracing this communicative paradigm more fully necessitates the culture’s abandonment of collective notions of both taste and veracity, thus weakening the forces that keep individual desires in check. Our present communication environment is one that invites the hypertrophic expression of the ego, enabling elites to erode public communication standards and repeal laws and regulations resulting in immeasurable individual fortunes. Meanwhile, perpetual plutocratic rule is made even more certain by the cacophonous public noise the rest of us are busy making, leaving us incapable, disinterested, and unwilling to listen to one another.

Keywords



Bibliographic data

Edition
1/2012
Copyright year
2012
ISBN-Print
978-1-61147-503-6
ISBN-Online
978-1-61147-504-3
Publisher
Lexington, Lanham
Language
English
Pages
225
Product type
Book Titles

Table of contents

ChapterPages
    1. Contents No access
  1. Introduction: Atlas Slouched No access Pages 1 - 18
  2. 1 Noise, Fragmentation, and Absurdity in U.S. Public Communication No access Pages 19 - 44
  3. 2 Coarseness in the Public Sphere No access Pages 45 - 62
  4. 3 Coarseness in U.S. Politics No access Pages 63 - 88
  5. 4 Coarseness and Reason No access Pages 89 - 122
  6. 5 Art and Cultivated Vulgarity No access Pages 123 - 150
  7. 6 Postdenominational Christianity and Coarseness No access Pages 151 - 170
  8. 7 Entertainment and the Entertainment Market-as-Democracy Meme No access Pages 171 - 190
  9. Conclusion: Our Age of Cynicism No access Pages 191 - 204
  10. Bibliography No access Pages 205 - 218
  11. Index No access Pages 219 - 224
  12. About the Authors No access Pages 225 - 225

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