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Price: $29.95

Format:
Hardback 288 pp.
156 mm x 234 mm

ISBN-10:
0199236135

ISBN-13:
9780199236138

Publication date:
July 2010

Imprint: OUP UK

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Eavesdropping

An Intimate History

John Locke

Why we can't resist listening in on our neighbours

Eavesdropping has a bad name. It is a form of human communication in which the information gained is stolen, and where such words as cheating and spying come into play. But eavesdropping may also be an attempt to understand what goes on in the lives of others so as to know better how to live one's own. John Locke's entertaining and disturbing account explores everything from sixteenth-century voyeurism to Hitchcock's 'Rear Window'; from chimpanzee behaviour to Parisian café society; from private eyes to Facebook and Twitter. He uncovers the biological drive behind the behaviour, and its consequences across history and cultures. In the age of CCTV, phone tapping, and computer hacking, this is uncomfortably important reading.

Readership : Suitable for Anthropologists, Psychologists, Sociologists, Linguists, and all those interested in human interaction and communication.

1. Passionate Spectators
2. Under the Leaves
3. Open Plan
4. Reluctant Domestication
5. Privacy, Intimacy, and the Selves
6. Personal Power and Social Control
7. What Will the Servants Say?
8. Passionate Exhibitors
9. Virtual Eaves
10. Intimacy by Theft
Notes
Reference
Index

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John Locke is Professor of Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences, Lehman College, City University of New York. His books include Phonological Acquisition and Change (Academic Press 1983), with Michael D. Smith, The Emergent Lexicon: The Child's Development of a Linguistic Vocabulary (Academic Press, 1988), and The Child's Path to Spoken Language (Harvard University Press, 1993).

The Talking Ape - Robbins Burling

Special Features

  • Places the human act of eavesdroping in a biological framework.
  • A foray into previously uncharted social and psychological territory.
  • Clearly written in a rich narrative style.