Turning Back the Clock: Hot Wars and Media Populism by Umberto Eco

Turning Back the Clock: Hot Wars and Media Populism

Umberto Eco
384 pages
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; First Edition edition
Oct 2007
Hardcover
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The time: 2000 to 2005, the years of neoconservatism, terrorism, the twenty-four-hour news cycle, the ascension of Bush, Blair, and Berlusconi, and the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Umberto Eco’s response is a provocative, passionate, and witty series of essays—which originally appeared in the Italian newspapers La Repubblica and L’Espresso—that leaves no slogan unexamined, no innovation unexposed. What led us into this age of hot wars and media populism, and how was it sold to us as progress? Eco discusses such topics as racism, mythology, the European Union, rhetoric, the Middle East, technology, September 11, medieval Latin, television ads, globalization, Harry Potter, anti-Semitism, logic, the Tower of Babel, intelligent design, Italian street demonstrations, fundamentalism, The Da Vinci Code, and magic and magical thinking.
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About this book
Pages 384
Publisher Houghton Mifflin Har...
Published 2007
Readers 0