In this Book
- Bread and Circuses: Theories of Mass Culture As Social Decay
- Book
- 2016
- Published by: Cornell University Press
-
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Lively and well written, Bread and Circuses analyzes theories that have treated mass culture as either a symptom or a cause of social decadence. Discussing many of the most influential and representative theories of mass culture, it ranges widely from Greek and Roman origins, through Marx, Nietzsche, Freud, Ortega y Gasset, T. S. Eliot, and the theorists of the Frankfurt Institute, down to Marshall McLuhan and Daniel Bell, Brantlinger considers the many versions of negative classicism and shows how the belief in the historical inevitability of social decay—a belief today perpetuated by the mass media themselves—has become the dominant view of mass culture in our time. While not defending mass culture in its present form, Brantlinger argues that the view of culture implicit in negative classicism obscures the question of how the media can best be used to help achieve freedom and enlightenment on a truly democratic basis.
Table of Contents
- Title Page, Copyright Page
- pp. i-6
- 1. lntroduction: The Two Classicisms
- pp. 17-52
- Preface
- pp. 9-14
- 3. "The Opium of the People"
- pp. 82-112
- 3. “The Opium of the People”
- pp. 82-112
- 7. The Dialectic of Enlightenment
- pp. 222-248
- 8. Television: Spectacularity vs. McLuhanism
- pp. 249-277
- 7. The Dialectic of Enlightenment
- pp. 222-248
- Index
- pp. 299-308
- Bread & Circuses
- p. 309