不敬、猥褻、メディア:ジャーナリズムの危機<br>Profanity, Obscenity and the Media

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不敬、猥褻、メディア:ジャーナリズムの危機
Profanity, Obscenity and the Media

  • 著者名:Lasky, Melvin J. (EDT)
  • 価格 ¥10,087 (本体¥9,170)
  • Routledge(2017/12/02発売)
  • GW前半スタート!Kinoppy 電子書籍・電子洋書 全点ポイント30倍キャンペーン(~4/29)
  • ポイント 2,730pt (実際に付与されるポイントはご注文内容確認画面でご確認下さい)
  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9780765802200
  • eISBN:9781351480277
  • NDC分類:361.45

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Description

This is the second volume of Melvin J. Lasky's The Language of Journalism series, praised as a "brilliant" and "original" study in communications and contemporary language, and as "a joy to read." When it was first published, it broke ground in focusing on the comparative styles and prejudices of mainstream American and British newspapers, and in its trenchant analysis of their systematic debasement of language in the face of obligatory platitudes and compulsory euphemisms.

Lasky documents the growing crisis affecting honest, thoughtful, and independent journalism in the Western world. He extends the scope of his first volume in the trilogy and deepens the interpretation. He also adds a personal touch of wit and anecdote, as one might expect from an experienced international journalist and historian. Lasky's examination of the use of formerly forbidden language is a triumph of sinuous semantics. In his incisive analysis, we see the tortuous struggle of a once Puritanized literary culture writhing to break free of censorship and self-censorship.

This volume on the phenomenon of profanity adds another dimension to Lasky's thesis on mass culture's trivialization of real social and political phenomena. It also underscores our society's embrace of banality, in standardizing politically correct jargon and slang. Readers of the first volume will find here a new range of references to illuminate the detail of what our newspapers have been publishing.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Part 1: Towards a Theory of Journalistic Malpractice
1. From A. N. Whitehead to Irving Kristol
Illusions and Self-Deception
Hard Facts and Soft Future
Adversarial Culture
"Sensations": From Silent Images to Talking Pictures
Art News and New Art
Of Nihilism and Mendacity
2. The Little Lie and the Big Story
Hitler's Hoax
The Counterfeiter's Fiction
Mysteries of the Piltdown Forgery
3. Difficulties in Grappling with Reality
The Reporter Rearranges the Scene
Janet Cooke and the Color of Truth
The Duping of Hersh's "Camelot"
Martin Walser's "Catechism of Correctness"
4. The New Shamanism

Part 2: Sex and Other Ongoing Titillations
5. The Ennui of Obscenity
Between Sexual Virility and Erotic Fatigue
Low Notes in High C
A-Word to S-Word, and their Synonyms
Of Ideology and Scatology
The Snafu Known as Swag
Filling Out the Missing Details
Private Parts, Public Lives
Alphabet Soup
Mr. Bloomberg's "$!*@&"
6. "O Propheta"
The Last Refuge
Porno Ploys and Crackable Codes
A*c*c*o*m*p*l*i*c*e*s, or: Participatory Obscenity
Steiner and Burgess On "Love"
7. Chaucer and a Choice of Taboo Words
8. Strong Odors, Blurred Pictures
9. Obsessions with the S-Word
10. The Case of the Missing F**r-L****r Word
11. Asterisks: From Byron to Madonna
12. Who's Afraid of the Big, Bad F-Word?
13. Tiger, the Times, and a Dreaded Black Asterisk
14. Morphing the A-Word
15. Terms of Agreement and Endearment
16. The Mergenthaler Option
17. A Matter of Illegitimacy
18. The Guard that Failed
19. The Desperate Search for "the Good Bits"
Sporting Language
Tom Jones and the Language Police
20. Swearing is the Curse

Part 3: Literary Origins and Popular Consequences
21. Sources of Malpractice
22. From Wordsworth to Orwell and Hemingway
23. The Prose We Write and Speak
24. Dealing with the Grandmother Tongue
The Continuing Domestication of Yiddishisms
Leo Rosten's Gallimaufry
25. Quotations that were Unquoted
26. Dirty Realism in the White House and Beyond
27. Towards a Vocabulary of Pop Diplomacy

Notes

Index