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Item Details
Title:
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ALL TALK
THE TALKSHOW IN MEDIA CULTURE |
By: |
Wayne Munson |
Format: |
Hardback |

List price:
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£53.00 |
We currently do not stock this item, please contact the publisher directly for
further information.
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ISBN 10: |
0877229953 |
ISBN 13: |
9780877229957 |
Publisher: |
TEMPLE UNIVERSITY PRESS,U.S. |
Pub. date: |
1 February, 1993 |
Series: |
Culture And The Moving Image |
Pages: |
288 |
Description: |
Examines the talkshow as a cultural form whose curious productivity has become vital to America's image economy. The author grapples with the sense and nonsense of the talkshow, particularly its audience participation and its construction of knowledge. He takes a close look at the talkshow's history, programs, and production methods. |
Synopsis: |
Wayne Munson examines the talkshow as a cultural form whose curious productivity has become vital to America's image economy. As the very name suggests, the talkshow is both interpersonal exchange and mediated spectacle. Its range of topics defines classification: from the sensational and bizarre, to the conventional and the advisory, to politics and world affairs. Munson grapples with the sense and nonsense of the talkshow, particularly its audience participation and its construction of knowledge. This hybrid genre includes the news/talk "magazine," celebrity chat, sports talk, psychotalk, public affairs forum, talk/service program, and call-in interview show. All share characteristics of lucidity and contradiction - the hallmarks of postmodernity - and it is this postmodern identity that Munson examines and links to mass and popular culture, the public sphere, and contemporary political economy. Munson takes a close look at the talkshow's history, programs, production methods, and the "talk" about it that pervades media culture - the press, broadcasting, and Hollywood.He analyzes individual shows such as "Geraldo," "The Morton Downey Show," "The McLaughlin Group," and radio call-in "squawk" programs, as well as movies such as Talk Radio and The King of Comedy that investigate the talkshow's peculiar status. Munson also examines such events as the political organizing of talkhosts and their role in the antitax and anti-incumbency groundswells of the 1990s. In so doing, Munson demonstrates how "infotainment" is rooted in a deliberate uncertainty. The ultimate parasitic media form, the talkshow promiscuously indulges in - and even celebrated - its dependencies and contradictions. It "works" by "playing" with boundaries and identities to personalize the political and politicize the personal. Arguing that the talkshow's form and host are productively ill-defined, Munson asks whether the genre is a degradation of public life or part of a new, revitalized public sphere in which audiences are finally and fully "heard" through interactive. Author note: Wayne Munson is Assistant Professor of Communications/Media at Fitchburg State College in Massachusetts. |
Publication: |
US |
Imprint: |
Temple University Press,U.S. |
Returns: |
Returnable |
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