Transcript document

The Written Word
Source: Marshall McLuhan
Understanding Media
This is actually about
printed and written words
as well as typed words
• McLuhan’s most famous statement is: “The
medium is the message.”
This encapsulated his
philosophy that media
are environments:
people change in
response to their
changes in
environment so
communication
innovations cause social
change
• McLuhan was a technological
determinist
• His argument depended on the idea of
Re-balancing the senses
• Every communication medium extends the
senses in a certain way
• Analogy: a hammer extends the fist; a pliers
extends the fingers; a wheel extends the foot
• Media too
– Telephone extends the ear
– Camera extends the eye
– Television extends the “active sense of exploratory
touch” (why would he say this)
• Did you adjust to the change from black writing on a
white background to white writing on a black
background?
• Were you aware of adjusting?
• What if the show had started with white on black?
• How was it adjusting to the font on
the previous slide?
• Would you prefer not to have to keep adjusting your perception?
Why am I doing this to you?
• The process of perceptual adaptation is
generally subconscious
• It takes rather severe and sudden changes in
our media to make us aware of it
• Perception involves the separation of
“figure” from “ground” (what might make
this difficult?)
Rebalancing the senses (again)
• We adapted to the color schemes by
recognizing which color was ground and
which was figure
• FIGURE/GROUND contrast is the basis of
perception and communication whether we
are talking about colors and fonts or more
conceptual aspects of message context such
as familiar and unfamiliar images.
Perception and Communication
• Another issue in perception and
communication is whether people write
with sound signs (an alphabet) or idea signs
(pictograms and ideograms)
• People in an alphabetic culture develop a
kind of perception that is different from
people’s perception in an ideographic
culture
Alphabetic Writing
(according to McLuhan)
• Linear & Sequential (each letter & word has a
specific place in a long line, between the first
and the last elements in the series)
• Analytical (breaks down speech into sounds,
thought into units)
• Rational (a function of signs not symbols)
• Inclusive (understood by most adults)
• Visual (I’m not so sure of this)
What is an alphabet?
A collection of sound signs (very
roughly corresponding to the
phonemes used in a language)
Alphabetic versus Ideographic
Writing
WORD
SOUND
IDEA
ALPHABETIC WRITING
(exhaustive list of sound symbols)
PICTOGRAPHIC WRITING
IDEOGRAPHIC WRITING
IDEOGRAPHIC WRITING
with some sound symbols
LIST OF SOUND SYMBOLS
Ideograms
(according to McLuhan)
• Non-linear (the elements are as important as
the order)
• Mosaic (eye & mind moves in all directions)
• Magical (“hieroglyph” means sacred writing,
words were believed to have powers)
• Exclusive (understood only by specialists)
• Aural (auditory) (I’m not so sure of this)
CHINESE
What part is the same? What part is different?
Does written English give any indication
that monkeys and apes are related and
similar animals?
Ideograms
(e.g. Chinese, Egyptian Hieroglyphs,
Aztec)
• Each word has a unique symbol
• Shape of symbol is essentially arbitrary,
though words of similar meaning may share
elements (radicals) in their ideograms
• Knowing how a word sounds may give you
clue to how it is written, but not predictably
• Knowing how a word is written generally
gives you no clue what it sounds like
HIEROGLYPHS
(pictograms + ideograms with sound symbols)
Source: http://hieroglyphs.net/000501/html/000-044.html
AZTEC
(pictograms + sound symbols)
Source: http://www.azteca.net/aztec/nahuatl/writing.html
By the way…How do you feel
about a completely B&W
presentation?
Want some color?
Perhaps color stands in for the
mythical/magical elements that
have been lost from
communication in an alphabetic
format.
Shift to alphabetic culture
• Importance of tribe declines, eventually
states emerge
• Growing emphasis on individuality
• One is a citizen instead of a subject; more
autonomous yet also more self-disciplined
• Thought, explanation, and logic must be
framed in terms of causality whereas before
it was framed in terms of overall patterns (e.g.
feng shui, astrology)
Gutenberg
• His significance is not really as an inventor
• The Chinese already had moveable type
• The role of Gutenberg’s press was to speed
the diffusion of books and thereby promote
literacy in Europe
• This in turn shifted power away from the Pope
and the monarchies toward popular visions of
Christianity and the nation
Democratization
• The use of alphabetic writing makes learning
to read and write much easier
• Printing press gives ordinary people access
to information and social critiques
• Reading & writing are no longer arcane skills
known only by scribes and elites
• People who can read and write for
themselves can take control of their own
information-gathering process, and eventually
tend to question authorities in both
government and religion
Industrialization
• The printing press is the first machine for
mass production
• Its elements are interchangeable, which
suggests a new way of thinking about things:
the idea of components
• The workers of an industrial society could not
be as ignorant as peasants
• The accelerating flows of capital and
investment required daily news, which was
only possible with a printing press