Paul Goodman, anarchist critic and author of Growing Up Absurd and Communitas, never wrote a book devoted exclusively to media. Yet he thought the condition of popular arts and news services in America so desperate that by 1964 he was calling it a constitutional crisisby which he meant that our democracy could no longer claim to be based in the public mores or have its justification in the public good, because of the usurpation of every forum by centralized media overseers. Inevitably, then, most of his books raised fundamental questions about the political and cultural effects of the media while addressing his primary concernseducation, psychotherapy, language theory, literary criticism, community planning, and his decentralist program for the New Left. In Format & Anxiety, Taylor Stoehr has assembled a full and coherent view of Goodmans attitudes toward TV, cinema, popular culture, censorship, and the universe of discourse in which these phenomena exist
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Soft cover. Condition: Near Fine. collected essays from 1930's to 1970's of the foremost anarchist cultural critic on popular culture, censorship, cinema, television and the universe of discourse, inscribed to "Carlo for your own critiques" , dated, by the editor on the half title page, 250 pp. plus 5 pp. publisher advertisement. Signed by Editor. Seller Inventory # 003031
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