Neil Postman Quotes About Culture

We have collected for you the TOP of Neil Postman's best quotes about Culture! Here are collected all the quotes about Culture starting from the birthday of the Author – March 8, 1931! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 14 sayings of Neil Postman about Culture. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • We do not measure a culture by its output of undisguised trivialities but by what it claims as significant.

    Neil Postman (2005). “Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business”, p.16, Penguin
  • As a culture moves from orality to writing to printing to televising, its ideas of truth move with it.

    Neil Postman (2005). “Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business”, p.24, Penguin
  • The idea of taking what people call the 'entertainment culture' as a focus of study, including historical perspective, is not a bad idea.

  • Everything in our background has prepared us to know and resist a prison when the gates begin to close around us . . . But what if there are no cries of anguish to be heard? Who is prepared to take arms against a sea of amusements? To whom do we complain, and when, and in what tone of voice, when serious discourse dissolves into giggles? What is the antidote to a culture's being drained by laughter?

  • The problem in the 19th century with information was that we lived in a culture of information scarcity, and so humanity addressed that problem beginning with photography and telegraphy and the - in the 1840s. We tried to solve the problem of overcoming the limitations of space, time, and form.

  • Children are the living messages we send to a time we will not see. From a biological point of view it is inconceivable that any culture will forget that it needs to reproduce itself. But it is quite possible for a culture to exist without a social idea of children. Unlike infancy, childhood is a social artifact, not a biological category.

    Neil Postman (2011). “The Disappearance of Childhood”, p.10, Vintage
  • Our politics, religion, news, athletics, education and commerce have been transformed into congenial adjuncts of show business, largely without protest or even much popular notice. The result is that we are a people on the verge of amusing ourselves to death.

    Neil Postman (2005). “Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business”, p.18, Penguin
  • Childhood is analogous to language learning. It has a biological basis but cannot be realized unless a social environment triggers and nurtures it, that is, has need of it. If a culture is dominated by a medium that requires the segregation of the young in order that they learn unnatural, specialized, and complex skills and attitudes, then childhood, in one form or another, will emerge, articulate and indispensable.

    "The Disappearance of Childhood" by Neil Postman, (Ch. 9 : Six Questions), 1982.
  • When a population becomes distracted by trivia, when cultural life is redefined as a perpetual round of entertainments, when serious public conversation becomes a form of baby-talk, when, in short, a people become an audience, and their public business a vaudeville act, then a nation finds itself at risk; culture-death is a clear possibility.

    Neil Postman (2005). “Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business”, p.129, Penguin
  • People of a television culture need “plain language” both aurally and visually, and will even go so far as to require it in some circumstances by law. The Gettysburg Address would probably have been largely incomprehensible to a 1985 audience.

    Neil Postman (2005). “Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business”, p.46, Penguin
  • It is inescapable that every culture must negotiate with technology, whether it does so intelligently or not. A bargain is struck in which technology giveth and technology taketh away.

  • But it is much later in the game now, and ignorance of the score is inexcusable. To be unaware that a technology comes equipped with a program for social change, to maintain that technology is neutral, to make the assumption that technology is always a friend to culture is, at this late hour, stupidity plain and simple.

    Neil Postman (2005). “Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business”, p.130, Penguin
  • If parents wish to preserve childhood for their own children, they must conceive of parenting as an act of rebellion against culture

    Neil Postman (2011). “Building a Bridge to the 18th Century: How the Past Can Improve Our Future”, p.138, Vintage
  • Television is our culture's principal mode of knowing about itself. Therefore -- and this is the critical point -- how television stages the world becomes the model for how the world is properly to be staged. It is not merely that on the television screen entertainment is the metaphor for all discourse. It is that off the screen the same metaphor prevails. (92)

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