From Marshall McLuhan to Harold Innis, or From the Global Village to the World Empire
Gaëtan Tremblay Université du Québec à Montréal
ABSTRACT
The author presents a personal reading of the pioneering contribution to communication studies made by two Canadian thinkers: Marshall McLuhan and Harold A. Innis. Running countertop the general trend stressing their similarities, he highlights their differences. Rejecting their technological-determinist standpoint, the author proposes a comprehensive and critical summary of their analytical frameworks and methodologies, seeking to assess the influence they have had on his own perspective, tracing the contributions they have made to the evolution of communication research. The author’s viewpoint is condensed in the title: we should go back from McLuhan to Innis, from a framework inspired by the global-village metaphor to one based on the expansion of empire. Keyword's Innis; McLuhan; Media theory; Technology theory; Globalization
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/2461/052b29f05b97336a489bdde4f0cd21d7eb3c.pdf
The Toronto School of Communication Theory:
Interpretations, Extensions, Applications
Rita Watson & Menahem Blondheim (Eds.),
Toronto/Jerusalem: University of Toronto Press/The
Hebrew University Magnes Press, 2007, 366 pp., $32.95 (paperback).
Reviewed by
Bob Hanke
York University, Canada
This book focuses on Harold Adams Innis and Marshall
McLuhan as scholars at the geographical centre of the Toronto School
of communication theory. It thus joins a substantial list of Canadian
works that have examined and assessed the contributions and legacies
of these two foundational thinkers in the field of communication
(Kroker, 1984; Stamps, 1995; Willmott, 1996; Acland & Buxton, 1999;
Babe, 2000; Theall, 2001; Cavell, 2002; Heyer, 2003; Marchessault,
2005; Genosko, 2005). This volume is the product of a transnational
network of 17 authors, two editors and two university presses. It
emerged out of the Toronto School sessions at the 9th Biennial
Jerusalem Conference of the Israeli Association for Canadian Studies,
held at Hebrew University in 2002. It contains a Forward by Elihu Katz,
an afterword by David Olson, and 13 chapters organized into three
parts: Interpretations, Extensions and Applications. The contributors
are mainly from Canada, Israel and the U.S. Four of the five chapters
in Part I were based on previous articles or are reprinted from the
Canadian Journal of Communication.
For readers who may still be unfamiliar with the academic lives of
these two towering figures, the editors have provided brief biographies.
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