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Hardcover Conscientious Objections Book

ISBN: 039457270X

ISBN13: 9780394572703

Conscientious Objections

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

In a series of feisty and ultimately hopeful essays, one of America's sharpest social critics casts a shrewd eye over contemporary culture to reveal the worst -- and the best -- of our habits of discourse, tendencies in education, and obsessions with technological novelty. Readers will find themselves rethinking many of their bedrock assumptions: Should education transmit culture or defend us against it? Is technological innovation progress or a peculiarly...

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Great introduction!

Several of these interviews read like extended premises for Postman's other books (notably "Amusing Ourselves to Death" and "The Disapearance of Childhood") but that doesn't make them any less enjoyable. Sometimes, if you're reading a few essays, you'll get a bit confused as Postman changes his voice a lot through these essays. That's not a bad thing, but I fear that some people out there might not pick up on it and suspect that essays such as "The Naming of Bombs" are genuine and not humourous pieces. Its a great book and it really hooked me onto Postman.

A Great Introduction to Neil Postman

This book contains essays and chapter excerpts from most of his other works (though not the later ones like Technopoly and The End of Education). Neil Postman is one of the keenest and most articulate of that species I call the "cultural hand-wringers". I'm very sympathetic to the arguments he makes, though sometimes I think he may be a bit too dire. I've read everything he's written that I can get my hands on, and all of it has been a total delight. (I'd steer any Postman fans to Robert Hughes _The Culture of Complaint_ for similarly keen, delightful, and refreshing take-no-prisoners denunciations) Since so much of his work is a complaint about how form (e.g. TV) has coopted function, I hardly think Postman himself would approve of this kind of recommendation, but he's so much fun to read even if you *don't* agree with him that it's worth the effort anyway. But watch out: he's so persuasive and passionate with his arguments, you'll probably end up doing so no matter how well-armed you are against it. Two essays that have stuck in my mind: "The German Question" where he ponders what the Holocaust consciousness will mean to postwar Germany, and "The Small Screen" where Postman is invited to write something nice about television for once.
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