Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television

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By: Jerry Mander
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EDITORIAL REVIEW



A total departure from previous writing about television, this book is the first ever to advocate that the medium is not reformable. Its problems are inherent in the technology itself and are so dangerous -- to personal health and sanity, to the environment, and to democratic processes -- that TV ought to be eliminated forever.



Weaving personal experiences through meticulous research, the author ranges widely over aspects of television that have rarely been examined and never before joined together, allowing an entirely new, frightening image to emerge. The idea that all technologies are "neutral," benign instruments that can be used well or badly, is thrown open to profound doubt. Speaking of TV reform is, in the words of the author, "as absurd as speaking of the reform of a technology such as guns."

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: Harper Perennial
Pub. Date: 1st March 1978
Catalog: Book
Media: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 376
Ean: 9780688082741
Isbn: 0688082742

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

Will change your life!
~ Written on Oct 28, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

I only read part of this book almost 20 years ago before loaning it out and never getting it back. I decided to try and find another copy. I quit watching TV just prior to finding this book all those years ago. I learned so much about how TV literally hypnotizes people. Now, I am incredibly shocked if I happen to see anything on TV. Since I have not been desensitized by years of progressively worse programming, I can not believe the filth found on the networks. I'm sure it's much worse on cable. It is so very sad that ultra liberal TV writers have largely succeeded in causing the moral fabric of our nation to decay while Americans sit for hours mindlessly absorbing their godless values.

Thought Provoking, Well-researched and Terrifying
~ Written on Jul 7, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

Hands down one of the best books I've ever read in my life. Jerry Mander's arguments are thought-provoking, rational, well researched and terrifying. After reading this book I see everything in my environment differently. Politics, homes, cleaning supplies, relationships, vehicles and jobs - I see them all in a new light. Modern media has effectively brainwashed the last three generations and turned Americans into drones; insatiable, product-consuming machines. I recommend this book to ANYONE that is open-minded enough to take a deep self-inventory of their life and lifestyle. Five Stars!!!

A flawed gem--but what a gem!
~ Written on Jun 22, 2009. 1 out of 1 users found this review helpful.

The specific purpose of this review is to introduce Mander's book to conservative and religious readers--the sort of reader who assumes that any book written against television will embody a conservative view of society. If this isn't you, you won't find my review to be of much interest.

The approach that Mander takes in this book is interesting and unusual, because he's not a conservative--he's a liberal. In fact, he is WAY liberal. Some readers who are accustomed to traditionalist, conservative perspectives on the evils of television may simply not used to hearing the kinds of perspectives that Mander introduces, and may never have been exposed to his view of economics, society, personhood, and the natural world.

Many people doing searches on books critical of TV are doubtless unaware that liberal-thinking people can be against television--they've probably been told that the TV industry is run by liberals whose agenda is to proffer liberal ideas. The arguments against television that such a reader is accustomed to probably have to do with the immoral content of the programs, the violence, the sexuality, the language, corrupt views of relationships, images of children resisting their parents' authority, the inaccurate (and sometimes disturbing) worldviews embedded in the programs, etc. And of course, all of those things ARE matters for concern and constitute good reasons why we should not be exposing ourselves to television.

What Mander helps us to understand, though, is that there are other arguments that may be mounted against television, arguments that are not related to most of the concerns voiced by conservative and religious people--and he has done a great service in thus expanding the discussion. Mander's chief concerns are related to what TV does to us as persons, as thinking beings relating to the world around us, and how TV programming can affect us cognitively and socially. One of his chief concerns is one that many conservatives probably don't share: the fact that big corporations (the people who, for the most part, control the content of what's on TV) are using this technology in order to shape your view of the world, and, in essence, to bring millions of people like you under their control. Any conservative who is (rightly) concerned about "big government" ought to be equally concerned about all of the monolithic institutions that dominate our lives: "big" business, "big" communications networks, etc.

A word to the reader who simply can't wrap his head around the idea that a "liberal" might be opposed to TV: Not all "liberals" are the same, or believe the same things. (Neither do all veterans believe the same things, nor do all Christians, or all business people.) "Liberalism" is an enormous community, and includes a great many people who disagree with each other about pretty fundamental things. There are dozens of nuances within liberalism, and the view that Mander represents in this book embodies a liberal perspective that many readers have probably not encountered before. That may be confusing to some readers who are looking for the sort of book that might come out of James Dobson's neighborhood--you'll keep looking for traces of a mindset similar to your own, and will be baffled by the fact that this guy has a totally different worldview--not just different from yours, but also different from your understanding of what "liberalism" is all about.

It is possible for very different people to be opposed to the same things, although for very different reasons. Jerry Mander is deeply troubled by television and everything it represents, and his perspective is about as far from conservatism as you can get.

For what it's worth, i'm pretty strongly conservative in most of my social, political and religious philosophy. And i found myself sort of smiling indulgently at, or outright dismissing, about 10-25% of what Mander had to say in the book. Not only are there some basic problems with Mander's socio-cultural perspective, but he sometimes indulges in sloppy reasoning--as one Amazon reviewer who only gave the book one star points out in a very interesting and detailed review. That's okay. After the problematic stuff has been skimmed off, what's left is a truly important book--one of the most important books i've ever read. What Jerry Mander has done is produce a fairly cogent, occasionally strange, and wildly compelling argument in opposition to television, that in no way depends on conservative suppositions about society and the world. I think that's pretty exciting, and serves as an opportunity for conservative-liberal dialogue on this issue.

Mander has given us a take on what television is all about that simply cannot be ignored--and i'd like to encourage the more socially conservative reader to tackle the book, along with whatever more traditional / religious materials you want to read on the subject. Mander's argument has the virtue of being systematic, nuanced, and complete, and it is well worth struggling with.

Great anti-TV read
~ Written on May 25, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

I grew up without a television so I have always been fascinated by the allure of broadcast TV and its hold on the public mind.

Mander presents 4 logical and straight-forward arguments that leave the reader with little doubt that TV is a tool of mass manipulation that is beyond reform.

The most interesting information to me was the psychology of why we remain rivited to the TV even when we may be disinterested in the content of a show and how television programming works to divide us as a society.
Mander explains that at the very same time that TV seperates and cuts us off from social contact, it creates an artificial sense of connection to a false reality. How many people do you know that can tell you more about the fictional cast of a sitcom than they can about friends and family?

Mander does a great job of describing the ill effects that television has on the human brain and overall health. Since reading this book I have heard many arguments for public television and so-called educational programming. Mander explains in a very convincing way that even "good" programming is still programming, that is, an effort to control and modify the thoughts of the viewer through a manipulative medium. Mander's main point is that it is the method of delivery that is inherently prone to autocratic control.

I would have to agree with Mander that TV is, was, and always will be a method of mass contol desquised as a learning tool, informer, entertainer, or comforter. If you are "on the fence" regarding the effects of television this book will make you want to go TV free.

Amazing
~ Written on Feb 16, 2009. 2 out of 2 users found this review helpful.

This book should be in the bookcase of anyone trying to persuade others of the dangers of TV and interested in how it effects us physiologically as well as psychologically. Add to that the fact that this book is a philosophical masterpiece written by a highly successful marketing genuis and you can't pass this one up. Oh and if anyone has a hardcover they are willing to part with send me a line.

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