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 11
... religious organization. Introduction of a second medium tends to check the bias of the first and to cre- ate conditions suited to the growth of empire. — Harold A. Innis, Empire and Communications. Shortly. after the end of World War ii ...
... religious organization. Introduction of a second medium tends to check the bias of the first and to cre- ate conditions suited to the growth of empire. — Harold A. Innis, Empire and Communications. Shortly. after the end of World War ii ...
Seite 34
... religious doctrines were written.The earliest documents were names and titles on sealings and vases, notes of accounts or inventories, and short records of events. Seals and wooden tablets with primitive script recorded the outstanding ...
... religious doctrines were written.The earliest documents were names and titles on sealings and vases, notes of accounts or inventories, and short records of events. Seals and wooden tablets with primitive script recorded the outstanding ...
Seite 35
... religious equality was triumphant.The masses obtained religious rights and corol- lary political rights.The Pharaohs gave up their monopoly and accepted the extension of rights to the whole population. Admission of the masses to ...
... religious equality was triumphant.The masses obtained religious rights and corol- lary political rights.The Pharaohs gave up their monopoly and accepted the extension of rights to the whole population. Admission of the masses to ...
Seite 36
... social revolution between the Old and the New Kingdom was marked by a flow of eloquence and a displacement of reli- gious by secular literature. Writing had been restricted to governmental, fiscal, magical, and religious 36 HAROLD A. INNIS.
... social revolution between the Old and the New Kingdom was marked by a flow of eloquence and a displacement of reli- gious by secular literature. Writing had been restricted to governmental, fiscal, magical, and religious 36 HAROLD A. INNIS.
Seite 37
... religious purposes. With increase in use of papyrus, simplification of hieroglyphic script into hieratic characters ... religions in the immor- tality cult of Horus and Osiris. Ra worship had become too purely political and individuals ...
... religious purposes. With increase in use of papyrus, simplification of hieroglyphic script into hieratic characters ... religions in the immor- tality cult of Horus and Osiris. Ra worship had become too purely political and individuals ...
Inhalt
9 | |
32 | |
46 | |
The Oral Tradition and Greek Civilization | 75 |
The Written Tradition and the Roman Empire | 106 |
Parchment and Paper | 138 |
Paper and the Printing Press | 164 |
Notes | 199 |
Marginalia | 220 |
Suggested Reading | 270 |
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accompanied adapted administration Aeschylus alphabet appeared attempted authority Babylonia basis became become brought built Cambridge centre century character Christianity Church cities city-state civilization communication concept concerned continued created cult culture decline demands dependent divine dominated dynasty economic effective efficient Egypt Egyptian emphasis empire England English epic established evident extension favoured followed France gave gods Greek growth History idea important increased individual influence Innis interest introduced Italy king knowledge language letters limited literature London medium monopoly nature newspapers NewYork ofthe oral tradition organization Origin Oxford papacy papyrus parchment period Persian philosophy political position Press priests printing probably problems production published reflected relation religion religious result Roman Rome scribes script significance social spread Study success temple thought tion trade translated turn University West writing written