Don't Look 
        Now is a DVD and Internet-based study of the historical evolution of ideas about 
        privacy in twentieth-century American society.  In chapters on 
        successive periods in U.S. history, the  book describes how 
        the progress of technology, the growth of government,
        the women's rights movement, the Cold War, the sexual revolution, and the 
        rise of global communications turned the public/private dichotomy into one of the most fiercely 
        contested aspects of contemporary life.
        
		 What distinguishes this 
        book from previous works on privacy is not only that it adopts a 
        consistently 
        historical perspective, but also that it provides access to all of 
        the documentary materials cited in the body of the text.  These 
        documents include photographs, video clips, political speeches, 
        Supreme Court opinions, newspaper articles, and other types of 
        historical evidence.  By integrating visual and audio resources 
        into an historical narrative, Don't Look Now  will 
        become the first comprehensive account of the ways in which the split 
        between public and private has shaped the political, legal, and cultural 
        landscape of the United States.