The Politics of Pictures: The Creation of the Public in the Age of Popular MediaPsychology Press, 1992 - 240 pagina's The Politics of Pictures is a history of looking, from Aristotle to TV audiences, from the invention of photography to the meaning of picnics, from Leviathan to synchronised swimming, Dr Johnson to the sexualization of war. John Hartley's wide-ranging and sometimes bizarre journey of discovery looks for the public in the realm of media, where citizens are now literally represented on screen and page. The book investigates popular media reality by showing how pictures and texts are powerful political forces in their own right, using a variety of primary texts to explore the way publics have been created, and exploring the political uses of media audiences. The unconventional approach is designed to show how popular reality looks to itself, and how its peculiar forms and connections actually challenge some venerable political and philosophical truths. |
Inhoudsopgave
A hairbrush with cultural studies | 15 |
The politics of pictures | 28 |
For all flesh is as grass | 42 |
A glance at pervasion in the postmodern | 84 |
From a sea monster | 119 |
Journalism and the visualization of truth | 140 |
Universal v adversarial journalism | 164 |
Notes | 216 |
234 | |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
The Politics of Pictures: The Creation of the Public in the Age of the ... John Hartley Gedeeltelijke weergave - 2017 |
The Twenty-First Century Performance Reader Teresa Brayshaw,Anna Fenemore,Noel Witts Gedeeltelijke weergave - 1992 |
The Politics of Pictures: The Creation of the Public in the Age of Popular Media John Hartley Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 1992 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Aboriginal adversarial agora audience binary body Bond Bow Wow Wow British Brooke Bond century Chapter Chartist circulation citizens classical common reader common sense contemporary critical cultural studies Daily Sketch democracy democratic discourse fact fashion fiction Figure forensic Gulf history of looking Hobbes ibid ideology imagined individual industry institutions intellectual Johnson journalism journalists knowledge Kodak Lenin Leviathan London Lord Snowdon means Melbourne metaphor Milli Vanilli nature opposition organization paper participation pauper press pedagogic pervasive Petrograd photograph picnic politics of pictures Poor Man's Guardian popular media popular reality power viewing Prince production public domain readership representation representative Royal says smiling professions society Sophie Lee Speke story Stuart Hall Sydney Sydney Morning Herald synchronized swimming teaching television textual and social thefe theory there's thofe truth University Veblen viewers visualization Washingtoon watch West Australian