Description

Book Synopsis
Roger Silverstone's compelling new book places the global media at the heart of the moral future of civilisation. It argues that the media (the press, broadcasting, the Internet and increasingly peer-to-peer technologies and networks) have a profound significance for the way in which the world is understood by its citizens.

Trade Review
"[An immensely] complex and densely argued book. At the same time, it is intuitively in tune with many lay people, and possibly increasing numbers of journalists."

Michael Bromley, Australian Journalism Review

"What a wonderful book! A thoughtful and convincing narrative, theoretically enlightening, and explaining the necessary question: how is the medialized cosmopolitan public sphere – the mediapolis – possible? A new Habermas! A new cosmopolitan critical theory of the emerging global civil society and its contradictions."

Ulrich Beck, University of Munich


"This is a very intelligent and original book by one of the most consistently interesting writers on the media. It is the most penetrating discussion of the moral challenges posed by our relationship to modern media systems, technologies and institutions that I have read to date. Roger Silverstone tackles big and complex issues here which go quite beyond what has come to be regarded as the normal agenda of “media ethics”. In doing so he generates some original and I believe powerful analytical concepts which should begin to establish the new moral-critical agenda that he rightly judges to be so lacking in contemporary media studies."


John Tomlinson, Nottingham Trent University


"Roger Silverstone's delicate meditation offers a guide to the perplexed for the citizen-audiences of the emerging global media sphere. Confronting a full agenda of problems facing humanity such as terrorism, theologico-military empires, and the proper distance toward minorities in an integrating world, Silverstone finds splinters of hope in the contradictory mess of mediated life today. The fact that media somehow bring the world together in a space of appearance, he argues in a style that is at once critical, nuanced, and bold, is enough to encourage us to think of media and morality in the same thought."

John Durham Peters, University of Iowa



Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgements vi

1 Morality and Media 1

2 Mediapolis or the Space of Appearance 25

3 The Rhetoric of Evil 56

4 Contrapuntal Cultures 80

5 The Mediapolis and Everyday Life 106

6 Hospitality and Justice 136

7 Regulation and Literacy 162

Notes 189

References 199

Index 207

Media and Morality On the Rise of the Mediapolis

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    A Hardback by Roger Silverstone

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      View other formats and editions of Media and Morality On the Rise of the Mediapolis by Roger Silverstone

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 05/10/2006
      ISBN13: 9780745635033, 978-0745635033
      ISBN10: 0745635032

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Roger Silverstone's compelling new book places the global media at the heart of the moral future of civilisation. It argues that the media (the press, broadcasting, the Internet and increasingly peer-to-peer technologies and networks) have a profound significance for the way in which the world is understood by its citizens.

      Trade Review
      "[An immensely] complex and densely argued book. At the same time, it is intuitively in tune with many lay people, and possibly increasing numbers of journalists."

      Michael Bromley, Australian Journalism Review

      "What a wonderful book! A thoughtful and convincing narrative, theoretically enlightening, and explaining the necessary question: how is the medialized cosmopolitan public sphere – the mediapolis – possible? A new Habermas! A new cosmopolitan critical theory of the emerging global civil society and its contradictions."

      Ulrich Beck, University of Munich


      "This is a very intelligent and original book by one of the most consistently interesting writers on the media. It is the most penetrating discussion of the moral challenges posed by our relationship to modern media systems, technologies and institutions that I have read to date. Roger Silverstone tackles big and complex issues here which go quite beyond what has come to be regarded as the normal agenda of “media ethics”. In doing so he generates some original and I believe powerful analytical concepts which should begin to establish the new moral-critical agenda that he rightly judges to be so lacking in contemporary media studies."


      John Tomlinson, Nottingham Trent University


      "Roger Silverstone's delicate meditation offers a guide to the perplexed for the citizen-audiences of the emerging global media sphere. Confronting a full agenda of problems facing humanity such as terrorism, theologico-military empires, and the proper distance toward minorities in an integrating world, Silverstone finds splinters of hope in the contradictory mess of mediated life today. The fact that media somehow bring the world together in a space of appearance, he argues in a style that is at once critical, nuanced, and bold, is enough to encourage us to think of media and morality in the same thought."

      John Durham Peters, University of Iowa



      Table of Contents

      Preface and Acknowledgements vi

      1 Morality and Media 1

      2 Mediapolis or the Space of Appearance 25

      3 The Rhetoric of Evil 56

      4 Contrapuntal Cultures 80

      5 The Mediapolis and Everyday Life 106

      6 Hospitality and Justice 136

      7 Regulation and Literacy 162

      Notes 189

      References 199

      Index 207

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