By Charles kulwa n reg no 42688
McLuhan text is fun to explore and
unravel
McLuhan writings style is elliptical
rather than linear; he runs the beginning of one argument to the middle or end
of other arguments, only to return later to finish (partly) the first
arguments, this is, of course, one of the difficult of buildings on his work.
Yet, this style also his work very engaging (or, as McLuhan would say, very
cool and participatory
The first sentence of the first
chapter of understanding media, for example, begins as follows. In a culture
like ours, long accustomed to splitting and dividing all things as means of
control (1964/1994).someone familiar with McLuhan media philosophy might
logically expect that this opening premise would be followed by a claim about
electronic media unifying once split phenomena. Instead, McLuhan concludes the
sentence with it is sometimes a bit of shock to be reminded that, in
operational and practical fact, the medium is the message. Thus, even this
first sentence presents a kind of puzzle by juxtaposing seemingly unrelated
claims
In the next sentence, McLuhan
explains that the consequence of any new technology result from the new scale
that is introduced into our affairs (thereby giving one definition of how a
medium can be a message). In the next few sentences, McLuhan presents the
example of automation, which eliminates jobs, but creates roles
Yet, one must read further into the
books to find clues to McLuhan definition of the word job as fragmented and
superficial work (thus linking back to the splitting and dividing phrase found
in the chapter’s first sentence and to his use of the term role to mean
integrated and deep, which sets the stage for his arguments about the effects
of electronic media.
but before he further develops his
argument about what are normally considered media of communication and long
before he explicitly links automation to electronic media or explains how he
views the assembly line as one of the main types of linear forms connected to
the mechanical print era- McLuhan digresses for a few paragraph to discuss how
the electric light is pure information and how the content of any medium is
always another medium
Any reader hoping to discuss a,
linear arguments in understanding media has to bring his or her own pencil and
ruler and attempt to redraw the ideas of the text into straight lines of
reasoning. Even the reader who can’t be bothered with wrestling with text,
however, is rewarded with a rich array of pithy sayings, prophetic
pronouncements, and playful puns. Sample of these can be found online at many
worship websites, in short McLuhan writings so delicious and rich that it seems
to carry out for participatory exegesis and for treatment as holy text.
Settings it aside feels almost sacrilegious
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