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Paperback Life: The Movie: How Entertainment Conquered Reality Book

ISBN: 0375706534

ISBN13: 9780375706530

Life: The Movie: How Entertainment Conquered Reality

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

The story of how our bottomless appetite for novelty, gossip, and melodrama has turned everything--news, politics, religion, high culture--into one vast public entertainment.

Neal Gabler calls them lifies, those blockbusters written in the medium of life that dominate the media and the national conversation for weeks, months, even years: the death of Princess Diana, the trial of O.J. Simpson, Kenneth Starr vs. William Jefferson Clinton. Real Life as Entertainment is hardly a new phenomenon, but the movies, and now the new information technologies, have so accelerated it that it is now the reigning popular art form. How this came to pass, and just what it means for our culture and our personal lives, is the subject of this witty, concerned, and sometimes eye-opening book.

A thoughtful, in places chilling, account of the way entertainment values have hollowed out American life. --The New York Times Book Review

Customer Reviews

5 customer ratings | 5 reviews

Rated 5 stars
Either you're a star or a nobody

This short book is jammed packed with great ideas and beautifully coined phrases. Neal Gabler has synthesized an analysis of how entertainment has influenced our lives. He has a rare talent for social commentary. Extremely well researched and organized. If you're up to the cerebral challenge, go for it. The thesis begins with an interesting history lesson about entertainment. Life was particularly dull on the farm in the...

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Rated 5 stars
splendid essay on the necessity of keeping your attention

This is an absolutely fascinating look at the notion of entertainment, as it evolved as a form of popular culture into a political and even life compulsion. From the beginning, I was rivetted by Gabler's wonderful writing and unusual ideas. You can read this many times to great profit. Gabler begins with a definition of what entertainment is: as opposed to the high art tradition, which requires elite education and effort...

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Rated 5 stars
Pillar to understanding society

Along with Paul Fussel's Class, these books are provocative views of modern society. Like "Class", Gabler doesn't really tell you anything that you don't really know but he does lay it out in a manner that I, at least, had never considered deeply. In doing so, he revealed a weakness that I recognize in myself and in much of the people in this society. Weakness? Gabler doesn't judge. He presents the case and steps back but...

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Rated 4 stars
Scratches the Surface

Neal Gabler merely scratches the surface as he describes the integration of media and entertainment into 20th Century culture, particularly 20th Century American culture. Gabler concedes at the outset that the book is diagnostic rather than prescriptive and he leaves few suggestions and little hope for a cure. The most disturbing part of the book is the final chapter, entitled The Mediated Self, in which he illustrates...

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Rated 5 stars
Awesome!

Very compelling read. If you want to be challenged to think, this would be the book. I highly recommend it, and i'm sure i'll be lending it to several of my friends.

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