A Reader's Guide to Fifty American Poets (Reader's Guides)

Other authorsPeter Austin Jones (Author)
Hardcover

Status

Available

Call number

811.009

Genres

Collection

Description

Publisher description: It's a common belief that the stories we encounter through mass media--whether in video games, action movies, or political comedy skits on Saturday Night Live--are just entertaining fantasies that have no tangible impact on our everyday lives, attitudes, and choices. Not so, says Karen Dill in this lively and provocative book. As much as we may want to deny it, the images, sounds, and narratives that bombard us daily have ample power to alter our realities. Dill, the author of the single-most-cited study on the effects of video-game violence, draws on extensive research in social psychology to show not only the myriad ways--for good and ill--that media influence us, but also why we resist believing they do. Vibrantly written and packed with eye-opening examples from everyday life, her wide-ranging analysis encompasses everything from gender and racial stereotyping to social identity, domestic violence, and presidential politics. She discusses the ways that super-thin models and actresses have altered women's self-images, dissects the manipulative strategies of advertising aimed at children and medical consumers, and explains how the "fake news" of The Daily Show and The Colbert Report may offer more authentic and incisive coverage than the cable channels and network newscasts. She also assesses the growing importance of "new media" like text-messaging, blogs, and Facebook in how we communicate and process information. In a media-saturated society, Dill argues, understanding precisely how these powerful forces affect us and learning how to deal with them are vital to the very way we function as citizens. How Fantasy Becomes Reality shows what we can do to move from the passenger's seat to the driver's seat as media consumers.… (more)

Language

Physical description

386 p.; 9 inches

Local notes

READIN, study

poets discussed:
anne bradstreet, edward taylor, william cullen bryant, ralph waldo emerson, henry wadsworth longfellow, edgar allan poe, henry david thoreau, herman melville, walt whitman, emily dickinson, edwin arlington robinson

edgar lee masters, stephen crane, robert frost, carl sandburg, wallace stevens, william carlos williams, ezra pound, h.d., hilda doolittle, robinson jeffers, marianne moore, john crowe ransom, thomas stearns eliot

conrad aiken, archibald macleish, e.e. cummings, hart crane, allen tate, yvor winters, laura (riding) jackson,
langston hughes, louis zukofsky, robert penn warren, theodore roethke, charles olson, elizabeth bishop

delmore schwartz, randall jarrell, john berryman, robert lowell, robert duncan, richard wilbur, james dickey, allen ginsberg, a.r. ammons, w.s. merwin, john ashberry, adrienne rich, gary snyder, sylvia plath
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