Empire and CommunicationsDundurn, 01.01.2007 - 288 Seiten It’s been said that without Harold A. Innis there could have been no Marshall McLuhan. Empire and Communications is one of Innis’s most important contributions to the debate about how media influence the development of consciousness and societies. In this seminal text, he traces humanity’s movement from the oral tradition of preliterate cultures to the electronic media of recent times. Along the way, he presents his own influential concepts of oral communication, time and space bias, and monopolies of knowledge. |
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Seite 41
... kingship.The weakness of a theocratic society was shown in the invasions of the Assyrians, the Persians, and the Greeks, but its strength was evident in the periodic outbreaks against foreign domination and in 41 EMPIRE AND COMMUNICATIONS.
... kingship.The weakness of a theocratic society was shown in the invasions of the Assyrians, the Persians, and the Greeks, but its strength was evident in the periodic outbreaks against foreign domination and in 41 EMPIRE AND COMMUNICATIONS.
Seite 42
... Assyrians and Persians in attempts to establish empires in Egypt. Nectanebo (359–342 BC) was the last Egyptian king claiming descent from the god Amon. The dominance of stone as a medium of communication left its stamp on the character ...
... Assyrians and Persians in attempts to establish empires in Egypt. Nectanebo (359–342 BC) was the last Egyptian king claiming descent from the god Amon. The dominance of stone as a medium of communication left its stamp on the character ...
Seite 46
... Assyria was used for the making ofbrick, and as a medium in writing. Modern discoveries of large numbers of records facilitate a description of important characteristics of Sumerian and later civilizations, but they may reflect a bias ...
... Assyria was used for the making ofbrick, and as a medium in writing. Modern discoveries of large numbers of records facilitate a description of important characteristics of Sumerian and later civilizations, but they may reflect a bias ...
Seite 57
... Assyrian power as a result of encroachments from Arameans who were pushed into Assyrian territory to the left bank of the Euphrates from the fourteenth to the twelfth centuries enabled the Hittitesk to establish Carchemish as a ...
... Assyrian power as a result of encroachments from Arameans who were pushed into Assyrian territory to the left bank of the Euphrates from the fourteenth to the twelfth centuries enabled the Hittitesk to establish Carchemish as a ...
Seite 58
... Assyrian officials and the policy of earlier empires in which personal union was achieved by allowing the king to rule in each state by a separate title was abandoned.The Assyrians lacked an interest in trade and captured commercial ...
... Assyrian officials and the policy of earlier empires in which personal union was achieved by allowing the king to rule in each state by a separate title was abandoned.The Assyrians lacked an interest in trade and captured commercial ...
Inhalt
9 | |
11 | |
19 | |
21 | |
32 | |
46 | |
The Oral Tradition and Greek Civilization | 75 |
The Written Tradition and the Roman Empire | 106 |
Paper and the Printing Press | 138 |
Paper and the Printing Press | 164 |
Notes | 199 |
Marginalia | 220 |
Suggested Reading | 270 |
Index | 274 |
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