Amusing Ourselves to Death

Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business

208 pages

English language

Published Jan. 1, 2005 by Penguin (Non-Classics).

ISBN:
978-0-14-303653-1
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4 stars (41 reviews)

Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business (1985) is a book by educator Neil Postman. The book's origins lay in a talk Postman gave to the Frankfurt Book Fair in 1984. He was participating in a panel on George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four and the contemporary world. In the introduction to his book, Postman said that the contemporary world was better reflected by Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, whose public was oppressed by their addiction to amusement, rather than by Orwell's work, where they were oppressed by state control. Postman's book has been translated into eight languages and sold some 200,000 copies worldwide. In 2005, Postman's son Andrew reissued the book in a 20th anniversary edition.

15 editions

Describes how different media affects how we think and act

5 stars

Content warning Summary

Review of 'Amusing Ourselves to Death' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

7/10

Postman wrote this polemic on Television in 1984. The World Wide Web was incepted in 1989. We'd have to wait until 2006 till Twitter launches and the 2010s until it takes over public discourse but the obsolescence of the all-might Television since then lends the book a certain retro-futuristic aspect...for a lack of words. That's not to say it's rendered irrelevant because its core arguments still resounds strongly as ever if not stronger.

- Cultures are defined by their medium of communication.
- Mediums have their own latent biases.
- No medium is fit for all discourse.

I think the average informed citizen of today's world, with their temporal proximity to Facebook genocides and The Culture War, has an intuition if not a deep understanding of what Postman was furiously gesturing at then, especially the last point. Sure, the specific form of the dangers warned of herein don't apply …

Postman is probably glad he is dead.

4 stars

Neil Postman wrote this critique of the television back in the 1980s. His primary thesis was that, we, as a society are slowly killing coherent dialogue due to the propagation of mass media. In a lot of senses, the stance that Postman is taking maybe agreeable at face value, but Postman takes an extremist stance on the matter - he really hates the medium of TV. I can't even imagine what Postman will think about the world we live in today.

Postman starts off building his argument by describing the times before visual media. Here he talks about how public discourse took place in the 1700s and 1800s - the public debates, the nuance is discussions and the public enthusiasm for long form exposition. To be completely honest, this is the part of the book that I found a little too long winded. It is very USA-centric, exalting the various …

Review of 'Amusing Ourselves to Death' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

If I was reading this book in 1985 or 1995 or even 2005, I'd give it five stars. Reading it today, I vacillated between wishing that Dr. Postman was around to write something similar about social media (I long to hear his evisceration of Twitter) and being glad that that poor man died before he had to confront the current reality. He didn't deserve that headache.

Frankly, the best way to read this book is to apply the questions he asks about television to social media. The answers you arrive at are terrifying but necessary. The medium is the message and the metaphor, of course, but it also shapes the way we think and talk to each other. It sure would be nice if we started thinking about how these technologies would affect us before we let them totally take over our lives, but I guess that's too much to …

Review of 'Amusing Ourselves to Death' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

The first half was really good. It is a sort of summary of the intellectual history of reading and literacy of the United States. It tells the story from the Colonial period up until the age of telegraphy and photography (that is, sometime in the middle to the late nineteenth century).

Second half felt kind of just a rehash of the arguments already made in the first part.

I am unconvinced of the examples about how television is not a good medium for education, at least in early or lower-level education. I do not think that education being entertaining is problematic at this level. Of course, for deeper thought, at the level of higher education, you'd have to read books and journal articles, etc.

That part about religion is interesting. Postman says that it is not possible for television to be a sacral space because of the 'peek-a-boo' quality, and …

Review of 'Amusing Ourselves to Death' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

A fascinating and well articulated argument, this was a much more compelling book than I expected. While I'm uncertain I'll change any of my viewing habits, my opinions of television's place in the realms of both education and political discourse have been shaken and clarified, respectively. I wholeheartedly recommend this book.

Review of 'Amusing Ourselves to Death' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This is quite possibly the most depressing book I have ever read. The author not only shares my view that television (or mass media) has undermined nearly every aspect of Western (particularly, but not exclusively, American) culture, but he explains exactly how the damage was done. Unfortunately I think we've passed the point of no return.

In the forward, Postman writes: "Orwell warns that we will be overcome by an externally imposed oppression. But in Huxley's vision, no Big Brother is required to deprive people of their autonomy, maturity and history. As he saw it, people will come to love their oppression, to adore the technologies that undo their capacities to think. What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one. . . . Orwell …

Review of 'Amusing ourselves to death' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

DeedThesis in chapter 2 is silly

Historical review of the written word in chapter 3 is interesting.

Discussion in chapter 4 of the "typographic" mind Is built on a sequence of "No true Scotsman"-style critical thinking errors and generalizing from exceptions. This chapter is destroying my trust in the author. He expresses the opinion that psychology and porosity all reasoning are opposed to each other.

Chapter 5 -- he makes up a lot of terms where perfectly good ones exist. E.g. Samuel Morse's " information grid. " it's a network, buddy; not a grid. No one calls it a grid. His arguments again decontexualized information does not support his thesis, as there has always been unactionable information. He complains that the world now lacks coherence and sense. This is a symptom of information overload. Perhaps the author is unable to cope with all the information availability and has lost his …

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Subjects

  • Mass media -- Influence
  • Mass media -- United States

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