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 1
... writing about the Canadian experience in all its varieties. This series of original or translated works in the fields of literature, history, politics, and biography has been gathered to enrich and illuminate our understanding of a ...
... writing about the Canadian experience in all its varieties. This series of original or translated works in the fields of literature, history, politics, and biography has been gathered to enrich and illuminate our understanding of a ...
Seite 13
... writing for anyone seeking to understand the nature of Canada. But Innis's intellectual goal was never so parochial. He had always insisted that the perspective of peripheral intellectuals was essential to the renewal of Western ...
... writing for anyone seeking to understand the nature of Canada. But Innis's intellectual goal was never so parochial. He had always insisted that the perspective of peripheral intellectuals was essential to the renewal of Western ...
Seite 27
... writing period we can note the importance of various media such as the clay tablet of Mesopotamia, the papyrus roll ... writers with a professional tendency to magnify their office have always been given to exaggerate the effect of ...
... writing period we can note the importance of various media such as the clay tablet of Mesopotamia, the papyrus roll ... writers with a professional tendency to magnify their office have always been given to exaggerate the effect of ...
Seite 28
... writing, music played its role in emphasizing rhythm and metre, which eased the task of memory. Poetry is significant as a tribute to the oral tradition. Sapir has noted that “many primitive languages have a formal richness; a latent ...
... writing, music played its role in emphasizing rhythm and metre, which eased the task of memory. Poetry is significant as a tribute to the oral tradition. Sapir has noted that “many primitive languages have a formal richness; a latent ...
Seite 29
... writing and on its significance to the history of civilization, but in the main studies have been restricted to narrow fields or to broad generalizations. Becker16 has stated that the art of writing 29 EMPIRE AND COMMUNICATIONS.
... writing and on its significance to the history of civilization, but in the main studies have been restricted to narrow fields or to broad generalizations. Becker16 has stated that the art of writing 29 EMPIRE AND COMMUNICATIONS.
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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adapted administration alphabet Ancient Aramaic Arameans Assyrian Athens attempted Babylonia became the basis brought Byzantine Byzantine empire Cambridge centre century Christianity Church city-state civilization communication concept Constantinople cult culture cuneiform decline deities demands Dionysus divine dominated dynasty efficient Egypt Egyptian emperor emphasis empire England English epic established favoured followed France gods Greece Greek growth Hebrew History Hittites Homeric Hyksos Ibid imperial important increased influence Innis Innis’s introduced Ionian Kassites king language large numbers Latin literary literature London medium Mitanni monarchy monasticism monopoly of knowledge newspapers NewYork ofthe oral tradition organization Orphism Oxford papacy paper papyrus parchment Pergamum Persian Persian empire philosophy Phoenician poetry political position priests printing probably problems production reflected religion religious Roman Roman law Rome sacred scribes script Semitic spoken word spread Study Sumerian temple tion trade University vernacular Werner Jaeger worship writing written tradition