McLuhan in Space: A Cultural Geography

Voorkant
University of Toronto Press, 1 jan 2002 - 322 pagina's

The first book to propose that Marshall McLuhan be read as a spatial theorist, McLuhan in Space argues that space is the single most consistent concept in McLuhan's vast and eclectic body of work. Richard Cavell demonstrates how McLuhan extended insights derived from advances in physics and artistic experimentation into a theory of acoustic space, which he then used to challenge the assumptions of visual space that had been produced through 500 years of print culture.

The notion of acoustic space provided McLuhan with a heuristic probe of prodigious range, allowing him to examine critically the many social and cultural forms of contemporary media production. It also enabled him to cross over intellectually from the purely theoretical realm into that of artistic production, where his interests in radical notions of spatial production were shared by a range of avant garde artists from bp Nichol to Glenn Gould, from John Cage to the Fluxus artists - an artistic milieu in which McLuhan increasingly came to situate his work. Cavell's book is the first to examine McLuhan's work in light of this artistic backdrop, and the first to examine his contribution to Canadian studies.

 

Inhoudsopgave

A Short History of Space
3
Mechanization and Its Discontents
31
Works of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction
39
The Physics of Flatland
49
Prosthetic Aesthetics
69
The Intellectual as Vates
91
Artiste de livres
101
Visible Speech
136
Art without Walls
170
Borderlines
197
McLuhan in Space
223
Details of Sigla
301
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Over de auteur (2002)

Richard Cavell is a professor in the Department of English and the founding director of the International Canadian Studies Centre at the University of British Columbia.

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