Ethics and Entertainment
Essays on Media Culture and Media Morality
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About the Book
As modern media shift from the distribution of information to its creation, a fresh inquiry into the ethics of media is needed. This collection of 19 essays provides useful perspectives for both producers and consumers of entertainment. Topics include the creation of celebrity, the effects of entertainment on children, the hybridization of entertainment and news, author and intellectual property rights, and the role of human dignity in modern media, among many others.
Instructors considering this book for use in a course may request an examination copy here.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Edited by Howard Good and Sandra L. Borden
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 327
Bibliographic Info: notes, bibliographies, index
Copyright Date: 2010
pISBN: 978-0-7864-3909-6
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Introduction 1
PART I. ENTERTAINMENT AND CELEBRITY
1. The Ethics of Speaking Out
Wendy N. Wyatt and Kristie Bunton 9
2. “I’m Sorry, Oh, So Sorry”: Celebrity Apologies and Public Ethics
Nikki Usher and Janel S. Schuh 23
3. Quasars: Silent Celebrities, Ethical Implications
Kyle F. Reinson 41
PART II. ENTERTAINMENT AND CHILDREN
4. “Sportainment” Meets High School Sports
Marie Hardin and Thomas F. Corrigan 57
5. The Diaper Demographic: Viewing Very Young Children as an Economically Viable Market
Erin L. Ryan and Keisha L. Hoerrner 70
6. Superbad: A Twisted and Touching Ethical Mess of a Movie
Joseph C. Harry 86
PART III. ENTERTAINMENT AND FACTUALITY
7. Tall Tales: Exploring the Ethics of Storytelling in the Age of Infotainment
Cynthia M. King and Deni Elliott 101
8. This Time It’s Personal: The Ethics of 9/11 Docudrama
Steve Lipkin 120
9. Bread and Circuits: Politics in an Entertainment Culture
Mike Dillon 135
10. The Common Morality of Interviewers: Evaluating Moral Guidelines of Non-Journalists
David Charlton 150
11. Cops and Reality TV: Public Service or Public Menace?
Jack Breslin 163
PART IV: ENTERTAINMENT AND AUTHORSHIP
12. Documentary Tradition and the Ethics of Michael Moore’s SiCKO
Sandra L. Borden 177
13. “Just a Cartoonist”: The Virtuous Journalism of Joe Sacco
Howard Good 195
14. Whose Tube Is It Anyway?
John Chapin 212
15. Enlightenment Ethics in DIY Culture
Bill Reader 226
PART V: ENTERTAINMENT AND DIGNITY
16. Fictionalized Torture: Jack Bauer’s War on Terrorism
K. Maja Krakowiak 245
17. Hillbilly Stereotypes and Humor: Entertaining Ourselves at the Expense of the Other
Elizabeth K. Hansen and Angela F. Cooke-Jackson 263
18. Epistemic Freedom, Science Fiction, and Ethical Deliberation
Trin Turner and Joshua D. Upson 281
19. Weight Watching: The Ethics of Commodifying Appearance for Profit
Berrin A. Beasley 297
About the Contributors 311
Index 315
Book Reviews & Awards
- “Recommended”—Choice
- “Any book that begins with a quote from the Dixie Chicks is one that I likely will want to read and one that my students are not going to hate me for requiring them to buy. Howard Good and Sandra Borden do an excellent job of bringing together a range of scholars to address the multifaceted nature of entertainment industry ethics…an imminently readable and well-edited book”—Journal of Mass Media Ethics.