Television in America

Table of Contents

Book Reviews

Edited by Wylie Sypher. Johns
Hopkins reprint, 1980.260 pp. $4.95

Essays

? Throughout its history, public broadcasting in America has been a medium in search of a mission. It was born during the early 1950s as an attempt to harness the educational potential of the "electronic blackboard." It was revamped during the '60s as an institution designed to preserve and foster America's (and, cynics would add, Britain's) "cultural heritage." Over the course of three decades, public broadcasting has received lavish praise, pointed criticism, and more than $...

Stuart Alan Shorenstein

One of the more memorable images from the movies of the 1970s was that of anchorman Howard Beale in "Network" urg- ing his TV audience to open up their windows and shout: "I'm mad as hell, and I'm not going to take it anymore." Unlike Beale's frustrated viewers, Americans during the 1980s will acquire a powerful tool with which to register their dissatisfaction with traditional TV programming-one that will allow them, in effect, to vote with their pocketbooks. The tool is new v...

Stuart N. Brotman

Historian Daniel Boorstin, the Librarian of Congress, has called television "the next great crisis in human consciousness." Such crises attend the birth of every new form of mass commu- nication. Even the written word did not emerge unchallenged. Plato warned that disciples of writing would "generally know nothing; they will be tiresome company, having the shadow of wisdom without the reality." The printing press, too, had its critics. It bred heresy and dissent, some said, a...

Joel Swerdlow

TELEVISION Television has replaced the popular novel-and the movies-as Ameri-ca's chief medium of entertainment, and scores of scholars and journalists have attempted to explain this phenomenon. The Library of Con- gress card catalog contains entries for more than 6,000 works on televi- sion. Yet, among them, truly il- luminating studies are few. The best one-volume history is Tube of Plenty: The Evolution of American Television (Oxford, 1975, cloth; 1977, paper) Erik Barnouw, a former Columbia...

About the time that the first McDonald's fast-food stand started selling hamburgers outside Chicago in 1955, a potential competitor named Hubie's opened in Dobbs Ferry, New York. Hubie's was a fully automated "hamburger machine." At one end, attendants fed in ground beef, rolls, cheese, pickles, and ketchup; at the other end, hot hamburgers emerged to slide onto the plates of waiting stand-up diners. But even the best-laid plans go awry, and Hubie's plans were flawed: The meat patties w...

Blair A. Ruble

Scenarios, statistics, and theories abound in U.S. discussions of the Soviet Union. But such abstract (and often abstracted) in- formation cannot fully convey what it is like to live in Soviet society. The Wilson Quarterly invited John Glad, a specialist in Slavic literature, to fill out the picture with illustrative excerpts from recent Russian fiction. Three of Professor Glad's choices- those Natalya Baranskaya, Arkady Arkanov, and Fyodor Ab- ramov-first appeared in Soviet publications. The current...

THE SOVIET FUTURE "Homeland of patience" was the 19th- century Russian poet Fedor Tiut- chev's sorrowful epithet for his country. As Berkeley historian Nicholas V. Riasanovsky explains in A History of Russia (Oxford, 1963; 3rd ed., 1977), the Russians have pa- tiently endured invasion, isolation, and a backward economy. Looking West, Russia's rulers have repeat- edly sought to catch up with Europe, "whether by means of Peter the Great's reforms or the [Soviet] Five- Year Plans."...

Barbara Ann Chotiner

public agencies and private institutions

"Nonproliferation and U.S. Foreign Policy."
The Brookings Institution, 1775 Massachusetts Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C.
20036.438 pp. $22.95
Authors: Joseph A. Yager et al.
After 35 years, the nuclear weapons
club now has six members -the
United States, Soviet Union, Britain,
France, China, and India. (Israel and
South Africa may make it eight.) Dur-
ing the 1980s, this number could dou-
ble.
Too many different factors seem to b...

This winter, Graham Greene's Ways of Escape, the long-awaited sequel to his first memoir, A Sort of Life (1971) will be published in New York. In the new book, the British novelist assembles a pastiche of recollections of his adventures around the world dur- ing the past 50 years-exploits that resulted in such vivid novels as The Power and the Glory, The Heart of the Matter, The Quiet American, and Our Man in Havana. Yet Greene has always brought a special dimension of faith to his novels. Here...

Frank D. McConnell

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