ABSTRACT

Why all the fuss over television? It is blamed for an assortment of evils, including violence, shortened attention spans, the decline of literacy and political indoctrination. In this scintillating and approachable book, Ellis Cashmore weighs up the theories and evidence. He argues that much of the panic is without foundation and that the single most important danger posed by TV is that it encourages us to spend too much. Cashmore agrees with many writers that television is an elemental force in today's culture, but he offers us a completely different account of how and why this has come about. It is an evaluation that will surprise, provoke and delight. In essence, Cashmore argues that television is the central apparatus of consumer society and its success is measured not in terms of whether we enjoy programs, but how much we spend as a result of watching them. It is a book that should be read by anyone who watches television and wants to know what it is doing to them.

chapter |9 pages

one bombardments and bee stings

chapter |16 pages

two a gift arrives

chapter |17 pages

three under the influence

chapter |15 pages

four the meanings of cultural studies

chapter |17 pages

five lethal link

chapter |23 pages

six answering advertisers’ prayers

chapter |17 pages

seven ethnic images

chapter |13 pages

eight in pursuit of women

chapter |26 pages

nine dream match

chapter |19 pages

ten arresting viewing

chapter |21 pages

eleven political hype and hyperreality

chapter |12 pages

twelve tomorrow, the world