On Television
A surprising bestseller when it was first published in France, this little book by Pierre Bourdieu offers a brilliant critique of television and its consequences for social and political life. Rather than simply denouncing television as a misrepresentation or trivialization of the social world, Bourdieu shows that television journalists are part of a journalistic field that shapes their actions and imposes a particular vision on the public, a vision that is grounded in the very structure of the journalistic field and that, through a variety of mechanisms specific to this field, produces a general disenchantment with politics.
Journalism and Politics
Preface
Part One
In Front of the Camera and Behind the Scenes
Part Two
Invisible Structures and Their Effects
The Power of Journalism
Appendix
The Olympics - An Agenda for Analysis
Translator's Note
Bibliography
Notes
Index
Times Literary Supplement
"Bourdieu not only presents a damming portrait of television as a domain of instant experts - les 'fast thinkers' - dedicated to the production of sensationalism and historical amnesia, he explains why this is so. Anyone who is seriously interested in journalism must read this book."
Katha Pollitt, The Nation
"As television became normal, so did its systematic corruption. This indispensable polemic, a little marvel of compression, is both a passionate call to resistance and a convincing account of its difficulties."
Todd Gitlin, Columbia University