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How has television affected our everyday experience? This question has generated endless arguments and speculations, but no thinker has addressed the issue with such force and originality as Joshua Meyrowitz in ^INo Sense of Place.^R Advancing a daring and sophisticated theory, Meyrowitz shows how television and other electronic media create new social situations that are no longer shaped by ^I where^R we are or who is "with" us.^L While other media experts have limited the debate to program content, Meyrowitz focuses on the ways in which television has rearranged "who knows what about whom," making it impossible for us to behave with each other in traditional ways. He shows how television has lifted many of the veils of secrecy between children and adults, men and women, and politicians and average citizens. The result is a series of revolutionary changes, including the blurring of age, gender, and authority distinctions.
Joshua Meyrowitz is Professor of Communication at the University of New Hampshire, where he has won numerous honors, including the Lindberg Award for Outstanding Scholar-Teacher in the College of Liberal Arts. He is the author of scores of articles on media and society that have appeared in scholarly journals and anthologies, as well as in general-interest magazines and newspapers.
- Introduction: Behavior in Its Place
- Part I--Media as Change Mechanisms
- Media and Behavior: A Missing Link
- Media, Situations, and Behavior
- Why Roles Change When Media Change
- Part II--From Print Situations to Electronic Situations
- The Merging of Public Spheres
- The Blurring of Public and Private Behaviors
- The Separation of Social Place from Physical Place
- Part III--The New Social Landscape
- New Group Identities
- New Ways of Becoming
- Questioning Authority
- Effect Loops
- Part IV--Three Dimensions of Social Change
- The Merging of Masculinity and Femininity
- The Blurring of Childhood and Adulthood
- Lowering the Political Hero to Our Level
- Part V--Conclusion
- Where Have We Been, Where Are We Going?
- Appendix: Discussion of Terms
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index