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Electronic Hearth: Creating an American Television Culture
 
 
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Electronic Hearth: Creating an American Television Culture [Paperback]

Cecelia Tichi (Author)

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Book Description

0195079140 978-0195079142 October 29, 1992
We all talk about the "tube" or "box," as if television were simply another appliance like the refrigerator or toaster oven. But Cecilia Tichi argues that TV is actually an environment--a pervasive screen-world that saturates almost every aspect of modern life. In Electronic Hearth, she looks at how that environment evolved, and how it, in turn, has shaped the American experience.
Tichi explores almost fifty years of writing about television--in novels, cartoons, journalism, advertising, and critical books and articles--to define the role of television in the American consciousness. She examines early TV advertising to show how the industry tried to position the new device as not just a gadget but a prestigious new piece of furniture, a highly prized addition to the home. The television set, she writes, has emerged as a new electronic hearth--the center of family activity. John Updike described this "primitive appeal of the hearth" in Roger's Version: "Television is--its irresistible charm--a fire. Entering an empty room, we turn it on, and a talking face flares into being." Sitting in front of the TV, Americans exist in a safety zone, free from the hostility and violence of the outside world. She also discusses long-standing suspicions of TV viewing: its often solitary, almost autoerotic character, its supposed numbing of the minds and imagination of children, and assertions that watching television drugs the minds of Americans. Television has been seen as treacherous territory for public figures, from generals to presidents, where satire and broadcast journalism often deflate their authority. And the print culture of journalism and book publishing has waged a decades-long war of survival against it--only to see new TV generations embrace both the box and the book as a part of their cultural world. In today's culture, she writes, we have become "teleconscious"--seeing, for example, real life being certified through television ("as seen on TV"), and television constantly ratified through its universal presence in art, movies, music, comic strips, fabric prints, and even references to TV on TV.
Ranging far beyond the bounds of the broadcast industry, Tichi provides a history of contemporary American culture, a culture defined by the television environment. Intensively researched and insightfully written, The Electronic Hearth offers a new understanding of a critical, but much-maligned, aspect of modern life.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Television is so deeply embedded in American culture that, in Tichi's view, it has brought about a "momentous cognitive change": the on-screen world ratifies existence. Politicians, actors and other "simulated heroes" of TV are elevated into specious authority figures. The author, a professor of English at Vanderbilt, maps the average viewer's "teleconsciousness," which begins with a "continuous reprioritizing of attention in the habitat of the 'always on' TV." She traces the postwar role of television in promoting such values as individualism, domesticity and Cold War patriotism. Drawing on writers--Donald Barthelme, DeLillo, Kosinski--and on cartoons, ads and rock music, she illuminates the pervasive influence of the "TV hearth" on personal behavior. This sophisticated, McLuhanesque study bristles with fresh insights. Illustrations not seen by PW.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

In an attempt to expand a study of television beyond the content of its programming, Tichi (English, Vanderbilt Univ., and author of Shifting Gears: Technolo gy, Literature, Culture in Modernist America , LJ 3/15/87) offers an examination of the "television environment." In other words, she covers the physicality of the set (thus the title), the act of watching (especially its voyeuristic implications), the way television "certifies" places and politicians, its uneasy relationship with the publishing community, and its perceived effects on children. This is a truly ambitious study. Tichi refreshingly pokes fun at the intellectual snobbery that blanket-condemns the medium, but she doesn't always offer a convincing defense. A doggedly academic writing style will limit her book to a smaller audience than it deserves.
- Thomas Wiener, formerly with "American Film," Washington, D.C.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
soft rounded corners, advertising texts
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Cold War, Certification-As Seen, New Yorker, Colonial Revival, Peep Show, Private Sector, Saturday Evening Post, Television Allegory, White Noise, Sony Corporation, Love Lucy, Wayside Inn, Emerson Corporation, The New York Times, Harper's Magazine, Meryl Truett, David Foster Wallace, Richard Nixon, Lee Harvey Oswald, Gilligan's Island, Ronald Reagan, Saul Steinberg, Max Headroom, Bennett Cerf
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