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Extending the visionary early work of the late Marshall McLuhan,
The Global Village, one of his last collaborative efforts, applies
that vision to today's worldwide, integrated electronic
network.
When McLuhan's groundbreaking Understanding Media was published in
1964, the media as we know it today did not exist. But McLuhan's
argument, that the technological extensions of human consciousness
were racing ahead of our ability to understand their consequences,
has never been more compelling. And if the medium is the message,
as McLuhan maintained, then the message is becoming almost
impossible to decipher.
In The Global Village, McLuhan and co-author Bruce R. Powers
propose a detailed conceptual framework in terms of which the
technological advances of the past two decades may be understood.
At the heart of their theory is the argument that today's users of
technology are caught between two very different ways of perceiving
the world. On the one hand there is what they refer to as Visual
Space--the linear, quantitative mode of perception that is
characteristic of the Western world; on the other hand there is
Acoustic Space--the holistic, qualitative reasoning of the East.
The medium of print, the authors argue, fosters and preserves the
perception of Visual Space; but, like television, the technologies
of the data base, the communications satellite, and the global
media network are pushing their users towards the more dynamic,
"many-centered" orientation of Acoustic Space.
The authors warn, however, that this movement towards Acoustic
Space may not go smoothly. Indeed, McLuhan and Powers argue that
with the advent of the global village--the result of worldwide
communications--these two worldviews "are slamming into each other
at the speed of light," asserting that "the key to peace is to
understand both these systems simultaneously."
Employing McLuhan's concept of the Tetrad--a device for predicting
the changes wrought by new technologies--the authors analyze this
collision of viewpoints. Taking no sides, they seek to do today
what McLuhan did so successfully twenty-five years ago--to look
around the corner of the coming world, and to help us all be
prepared for what we will find there.
The Global Village extends the visionary work of Marshall McLuhan to today's worldwide, integrated electronic network. It sets out a detailed conceptual framework through which the technological advances of the past two decades may be understood.
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