Enough Said: What’s gone wrong with the language of politics?

Enough Said: What’s gone wrong with the language of politics?

by Mark Thompson (Author)

Synopsis

How do we discuss serious ideas in the age of 24-hour news? What was rhetoric in the past and what should it be now? And what does Islamic State have in common with Donald Trump? We've never had more information or more opportunity to debate the issues of the day. Yet the relationship between politicians, the media and the public is characterised by suspicion, mistrust and apathy. What has gone wrong? Enough Said reveals how political, social and technological change has transformed our political landscape - and how we talk about the issues that affect us all. Political rhetoric has become stale and the mistrust of politicians has made voters flock to populists who promise authenticity, honesty and truth instead of spin, evasiveness and lies. Featuring Ronald Reagan and Sarah Palin, Tony Blair and George Osborne, Silvio Berlusconi and many more star performers, Enough Said shows how public language is losing its power, and how an ominous gap is opening between the governed and those who govern. The result of decades of first-hand experience of politics and media, this is an essential, brilliant diagnosis of what we should stop doing and what we should start doing in order to reinvigorate Western democracy.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 384
Publisher: Bodley Head
Published: 01 Sep 2016

ISBN 10: 1847923127
ISBN 13: 9781847923127
Book Overview: How do we discuss serious ideas in the age of 24-hour news? What was rhetoric in the past and what should it be now? And what does Islamic State have in common with Donald Trump?

Media Reviews
[A] superb book... Thompson's own experience in the media is brilliantly deployed throughout for insight... Thompson is a sharp and entertaining analyst of political language itself. -- Steven Poole * Guardian *
He writes restlessly and compellingly... [An] intricately but also urgently argued book. -- John Lloyd * Financial Times *
Thompson's great virtue in this book is his steady and cool-headed historicism... Thompson is lucid, well read, level-headed and thoughtful. His range of reference is wide...He has a robust familiarity with the history of scholarship on rhetoric, and scatters his text with easeful and on-point references to Max Weber, Martin Heidegger and Marshall McLuhan... The detail is excellent. Enough Said's particular glories, to this reader, are Thompson's frequent and sensitive close readings of particular instances of public language. -- Sam Leith * Prospect *
[An] important study ... [Thompson] usually advances his case in cool, nuanced and forensic prose, but he is a blistering flame-thrower about the consequences of the digital revolution. -- Andrew Rawnsley * Observer *
Thompson not only writes beautifully. He knows what he is talking about... [An] enjoyable, thought-provoking mix of manifesto, history, rhetorical analysis and autobiography. -- Tim Bale * Literary Review *
Given Thompson's standing as a past leader of one of the world's dominant news organizations and the current head of another, what he thinks about the interactions among politicians, citizens and the press is by definition important. * New York Times Book Review *
An ambitious book... The book is at its most persuasive when it grapples with the dilemmas of our time. -- Roger Mosey * New Statesman *
Thompson uses his unique vantage point ... to assess the deterioration of political language and the current state of the media landscape. Thompson's writing packs a high percentage of insights per page and his book manages to be an exemplary investigation, a history, an autopsy, a practical manual, and a cautionary tale all at once. * Publishers Weekly *
For the analysis - and the insights from a distinguished and experienced journalist and news executive - the book is well worth a read. * Enlightened Economist *
Enough Said has real value ... We may thank Mark Thompson for the story he has told. -- Jonathon Green * Daily Telegraph *
Author Bio
Mark Thompson is CEO of the New York Times and has served as Chief Executive of Channel 4 and Director General of the BBC. In 2012 he was a visiting professor of rhetoric and the art of public persuasion at the University of Oxford.