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Marshall McLuhan LCC 2700: Intro to Computational Media Spring 2006 Ian Bogost / David Jimison.

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Marshall McLuhan LCC 2700: Intro to Computational Media Spring 2006 Ian Bogost / David Jimison
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Page 1: Marshall McLuhan LCC 2700: Intro to Computational Media Spring 2006 Ian Bogost / David Jimison.

Marshall McLuhan

LCC 2700: Intro to Computational MediaSpring 2006Ian Bogost / David Jimison

Page 2: Marshall McLuhan LCC 2700: Intro to Computational Media Spring 2006 Ian Bogost / David Jimison.

Marshall McLuhan

Gutenberg Galaxy (1962)

printing changed culture

Understanding Media (1964)

“electric” media change culture

Media shape our senses and perceptions

A new medium means a new shape to human consciousness

Page 3: Marshall McLuhan LCC 2700: Intro to Computational Media Spring 2006 Ian Bogost / David Jimison.

McLuhan and Media Ecology

Studying media environments

Technology plays a role in human affairs

Neil Postman, NYU ‘71 — How media communication affect human understanding

Structure, content, effect

Page 4: Marshall McLuhan LCC 2700: Intro to Computational Media Spring 2006 Ian Bogost / David Jimison.

Communication technology’s cognitive effect on society

The alphabet, printing press changes the way we think

Print culture (15th c). began to privilege the visual over the oral

Print encourages static, segmented attitudes that resist collaboration and encourage compartmentalization

Gutenberg Galaxy

Page 5: Marshall McLuhan LCC 2700: Intro to Computational Media Spring 2006 Ian Bogost / David Jimison.

Mechanization of print

reinforced orientation toward uniform objective truth

introduced a segmented, cause /effect, rationalist worldview

prepared us for a mechanical, industrial, collectivist age

suppressed mythic, multi-sensorial, “organic” experience

Gutenberg Galaxy

Page 6: Marshall McLuhan LCC 2700: Intro to Computational Media Spring 2006 Ian Bogost / David Jimison.

Electronic media are poised (1960s!) to replace print

New tribalism — multisensory awareness

The Global Village and “surfing” as rapid, heterogenous movement

Page 7: Marshall McLuhan LCC 2700: Intro to Computational Media Spring 2006 Ian Bogost / David Jimison.

Understanding Media(1964)

All media as extensions of ourselves serve to provide new transforming vision and awareness.

Media themselves — not their content — should be the object of study

The properties of the medium are far more important than the “content” they carry

Page 8: Marshall McLuhan LCC 2700: Intro to Computational Media Spring 2006 Ian Bogost / David Jimison.

McLuhan Aphorisms from Understanding Media (1964)

The medium is the message:A new medium shapes and controls the scale and form of human association and action.e.g. railroad, plane; telegraph, telephone,

mobile phone

The content of any medium is always another medium

Print encapsulates writingWriting encapsulates speech

Page 9: Marshall McLuhan LCC 2700: Intro to Computational Media Spring 2006 Ian Bogost / David Jimison.

McLuhan’s sound barrier metaphor

We feel the contours of a medium as we are moving beyond it

Media are invisible when we are hypnotized by their ubiquity

Page 10: Marshall McLuhan LCC 2700: Intro to Computational Media Spring 2006 Ian Bogost / David Jimison.

“Electric media” are like Cubism: simultaneous viewpoints from multiple angles

Pablo PicassoThe Guitar Player (1910)


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