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The Private Death Of Public Discourse

  • The Private Death Of Public Discourse
  • Attribution

    Barry Sanders
  • Publication Details

    Book, Beacon Press, 1998
  • Availability

    LOCATIONCALL #STATUS
      (LOWER LEVEL)  E169.1 .S242 1998         AVAILABLE

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  • Description

    Sanders can be overly dogmatic in his insistence that computer technology cannot contribute to the type of literacy he champions, as in his claim that writing with a word processor inspires less respect for language than writing directly onto paper. Although he is certainly correct to say that using a word processor is a fundamentally different experience from any other form of writing (a notion Steven Johnson explores thoughtfully in Interface Culture), one simply cannot lump together all other writing technologies, such as pencils and electric typewriters, and say that word processing is the opposite. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)
  • Author

  • Subject

  • Places in this work

  • Notes

    • Few people these days would deny that the times have turned nasty. Users get flamed on the internet, drivers get shot on the freeways, politicians get shouted down in Congress, women get accosted at health clinics….The Private Death of Public Olscourse traces the way meaning has succumbed to meanness in this country, and why. Barry Sanders claims that the contemporary erosion of our interior space - where the reflective life occurs - accounts for the decline of private ideas and decent public discourse. He begins with the historical construction of the modern private self and shows how the opening of the interior of the human body in the seventeenth century created a new frontier for physicians and social scientists, just as America was establishing the rights of the individual. Sanders’s grasp of American intellectual history allows us to see the New Critics as silencers: Huck Finn as a character who "does not know how to handle liberation"; and the Free Speech movement launched at Sproul Hall in 1968 as - for a moment - a whole new way to think about common ground. Today, Sanders argues, the greatest threat to inner space comes from the electronic media, and only through a return to true literacy can people talk themselves back into community
  • Contents

    • 1. The Meaning of Meaning
    • 2. Bloom and Bush - Literary Criticism as Foreign Policy
    • 3. The Self as American Obsession
    • 4. The Invisible World
    • 5. "The Space of Appearance"
    • 6. America on Liberty Island
  • ISBN

    • 0807004340
  • LCCN

  • Open Library ID

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