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Media & values : intimate transgressions in a changing moral and cultural landscape / David E. Morrison ... [et al.].

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Bristol, UK ; Chicago: Intellect ; Chicago : University of Chicago Press 2008.Description: viii, 392 p. ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 1841501832
  • 9781841501833
Other title:
  • Media and values
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 302.23 MOR
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Standard Loan LSAD Library Main Collection 302.23 MOR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 39002100398495

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Media and Values investigates the moral performance of the media. Based on an exhaustive number of focus groups, surveys, and interviews with senior media staffers in the United Kingdom and Europe, this book charts the changing status of the media as a moral voice. The authors argue that television has lost the authority to espouse a single vision of the proper way to live, and instead reflects the norms of a variety of social groups. This groundbreaking volume addresses the lack of moral certainty reflected both in television programs and their audiences. "There are great riches here: from the interviews with senior media executives . . . to the discussion of popular television culture's celebration of celebrity."--John Lloyd, Prospect "This profoundly original and learned book creatively illuminates citizens' moral reasoning about the media, culture, and government. A tour de force of nuanced interdisciplinary scholarship, Media & Values offers wide-ranging insights into the responsibilities of the communication industry, the justifications and consequences of telecoms regulation--and the nature of the good society itself."--Robert M. Entman, J. B. and M. C. Shapiro Professor of Media & Public Affairs, George Washington University "This is a very important book--a 'must read.' The intellectual scope is astonishing: the problem it addresses is quite crucial--namely the moral incoherence of the contemporary world and the way that this shows up in empirical research into individual attitudes/opinions/tastes/judgements. It is clearly a cumulative critical reassessment of the implications of research going back to the sixties. It's original, powerful, thoughtful and spot-on as a diagnosis of the times and the very real issues we confront today. A major piece of work."--Paddy Scannell, Department of Communication Studies, University of Michigan

Originally published: Bristol, UK : Intellect Books, 2007.

Includes bibliographical references (p. [389]-392).

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • Acknowledgements (p. vii)
  • Prologue (p. 1)
  • Introduction (p. 9)
  • The Philosophical Underpinnings
  • 1 The Need for a Moral Language (p. 25)
  • Part 1
  • The Historical Context: The Moral Void
  • 2 The Question of Regulation: The Absence of a Moral Language (p. 61)
  • Cultural Contestation
  • 3 Culture in Practice (p. 89)
  • Moral Decline and the Rights of the Individual
  • 4a What Constitutes Social and Anti-Social Behaviour? Views of Authority - Voices from Focus Groups (p. 113)
  • 4b What Constitutes Social and Anti-Social Behaviour? Views of Authority - Voices from Surveys (p. 155)
  • Part 2
  • The Transgression of Privacy
  • 5 Privacy and the Construction of Self (p. 191)
  • Interviewing the Industry
  • 6 The Problem of Privacy (p. 207)
  • The Public and the Private: The Self-Monitoring of Behaviour
  • 7 Clarifying the Conceptual Problems (p. 259)
  • The Idea of Privacy
  • 8a What are the Limits of the Private? Voices from Focus Groups (p. 279)
  • 8b What are the Limits of the Private? Voices from Surveys (p. 341)
  • Epilogue (p. 374)
  • Appendix (p. 381)
  • Bibliography (p. 389)

Author notes provided by Syndetics

David E. Morrison is Professor of Communications Research, Institute of Communications Studies, University of Leeds
Matthew Kieran is Senior Lecturer, School of Philosophy, University of Leeds
Michael Svennevig is Senior Research Fellow, Institute of Communications Studies, University of Leeds
Sarah Ventress is Research Officer, Institute of Communications Studies, University of Leeds

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