Empire and CommunicationsRowman & Littlefield, 2007 - 287 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 influenced the development of consciousness and societies. In this foundational work, 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. With a new introduction by Alexander John Watson, author of Marginal Man: The Dark Vision of Harold Innis, and a new foreword by series editor Andrew Calabrese, this previously hard-to-obtain book is now readily available again. All communication scholars should have this classic book on their shelves, and it also serves as a great supplementary text in communication and economics courses. |
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Seite 81
... epic poems in hexameter which involved rigidities but permitted elasticities facilitating adaptation to the demands of vernacular speech . Epic technique involved ... epic and developed their own epic language 81 EMPIRE AND COMMUNICATIONS.
... epic poems in hexameter which involved rigidities but permitted elasticities facilitating adaptation to the demands of vernacular speech . Epic technique involved ... epic and developed their own epic language 81 EMPIRE AND COMMUNICATIONS.
Seite 82
Harold Adams Innis. over the Aeolian epic and developed their own epic language . The Homeric poems appeared in the Ionian language with a substantial mixture of archaic forms appropriate to epic style in Aeolic which were retained ...
Harold Adams Innis. over the Aeolian epic and developed their own epic language . The Homeric poems appeared in the Ionian language with a substantial mixture of archaic forms appropriate to epic style in Aeolic which were retained ...
Seite 83
... epic epic had 13 grown and declined with monarchy . The place of the epic in an aristocratic society assumed that mastery of words meant intellectual sovereignty . But the limited size of the epics , determined by the demands of an oral ...
... epic epic had 13 grown and declined with monarchy . The place of the epic in an aristocratic society assumed that mastery of words meant intellectual sovereignty . But the limited size of the epics , determined by the demands of an oral ...
Inhalt
Publishers Note | 9 |
Preface by Harold A Innis | 19 |
2 | 32 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age Anthony Giddens Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1991 |