Book description
Tune in, turn on and get smarter ...
The Simpsons, Desperate Housewives, The Apprentice, The Sopranos,
Grand Theft Auto: We're constantly being told that popular culture is
just mindless entertainment. But, as Steven Johnson shows, it's
actually making us more intelligent.
Here he puts forward a radical alternative to the endless complaints
about reality TV, throwaway movies and violent video games. He shows
that mass culture is actually more sophisticated and challenging than
ever before. When we focus on what our minds have to do to process its
complex, multilayered messages, it becomes clear that it's not dumbing
us down - but smartening us up.
Steven Johnson is the author of the US bestseller Mind Wide Open.
His previous book, Emergence: The Connected Lives Of Ants, Brains,
Cities, and Software, was named as one of the best books of 2001 by
Esquire, The Village Voice, Amazon. com, and Discover Magazine. It was
named as a finalist for the Helen Bernstein Award for Excellence in
Journalism. He is also the author of the 1997 book, Interface Culture.
Johnson's writing has appeared in The New Yorker, The Nation,
Harper's, and the Guardian, as well as on the op-ed pages of The New
York Times and The Wall Street Journal. He writes the monthly
'Emerging Technology' column for Discover magazine, and is a
Contributing Editor to Wired. The co-founder of the award-winning web
sites FEED and Plastic. com, Johnson teaches at New York University's
Interactive Telecommunications Program, and has degrees in Semiotics
and English Literature from Brown and Columbia Universities.
Steven Johnson also hosts a web log at www. stevenberlinjohnson. com.