None of Your Damn Business
Privacy in the United States from the Gilded Age to the Digital Age
9780226819952
9780226557748
9780226557885
None of Your Damn Business
Privacy in the United States from the Gilded Age to the Digital Age
Capello investigates why we’ve been so blithe about giving up our privacy and all the opportunities we’ve had along the way to rein it in.
Every day, Americans surrender their private information to entities claiming to have their best interests in mind. This trade-off has long been taken for granted, but the extent of its nefariousness has recently become much clearer. As None of Your Damn Business reveals, the problem is not so much that data will be used in ways we don’t want, but rather how willing we have been to have our information used, abused, and sold right back to us. In this startling book, Lawrence Cappello targets moments from the past 130 years of US history when privacy was central to battles over journalistic freedom, national security, surveillance, big data, and reproductive rights. As he makes dismayingly clear, Americans have had numerous opportunities to protect the public good while simultaneously safeguarding our information, and we’ve squandered them every time. None of Your Damn Business is a rich and provocative survey of an alarming topic that grows only more relevant with each fresh outrage of trust betrayed.
Every day, Americans surrender their private information to entities claiming to have their best interests in mind. This trade-off has long been taken for granted, but the extent of its nefariousness has recently become much clearer. As None of Your Damn Business reveals, the problem is not so much that data will be used in ways we don’t want, but rather how willing we have been to have our information used, abused, and sold right back to us. In this startling book, Lawrence Cappello targets moments from the past 130 years of US history when privacy was central to battles over journalistic freedom, national security, surveillance, big data, and reproductive rights. As he makes dismayingly clear, Americans have had numerous opportunities to protect the public good while simultaneously safeguarding our information, and we’ve squandered them every time. None of Your Damn Business is a rich and provocative survey of an alarming topic that grows only more relevant with each fresh outrage of trust betrayed.
352 pages | 6 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2019
History: American History
Law and Legal Studies: Legal Thought
Political Science: Public Policy
Sociology: Collective Behavior, Mass Communication
Reviews
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part 1: What We Talk about When We Talk about Privacy
Part 2: Shouting from the Housetops: The Right to Privacy and the Rise of Photojournalism, 1890–1928
Part 3: Exposing the Enemy Within: Privacy and National Security, 1917–1961
Part 4: Wiretaps, Bugs, and CCTV: Privacy and the Evolution of Physical Surveillance, 1928–1998
Part 5: Big Iron and the Small Government: Privacy and Data Collection, 1933–1988
Part 6: Sex, Morality, and Reproductive Choice: The Right to Privacy Recognized, 1961–1992
Part 7: Taking Stock
Notes
Index
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