An Interpretation of -
Identity and Violence as described by Marshall McLuhan;
Identity and Violence as described by Marshall McLuhan;
Ode
to the evolution of our nervous system.
Marshall
McLuhan spoke of the media and its vast effects in the 1930s and even made all
of his postulates intriguingly relevant to his more recent audience inviting
them to participate in his uber intellectual and futuristic pronouncements in
the 1970s. I find that even though time has learnedly evolved and with it, also
has many technologically ordained gadgets, the essence of his dialogue and the
presence of mind with which he had foreseen and given time to the inevitable
structural changes in societal tendencies, in the aftermath of total endowment
of our faculties to artificial intelligence, is germane to any ongoing dialogue
about the subject today.
His
postulates were conducive to a curious media savvy audience but his teachings
and fore sight had also made an impression in the world of science and
Psychology. This amalgamation of concepts and paradigms is pertinent to the way
I would like to analyze a given subject. For there cannot be a separation of
the two if a study ought to be accurate.
He effortlessly served those who
questioned the nature of media as being transient and ethereal and hence less
relevant to the more consequentially conferred evidences in real life. He was
one of the first to speak freely of the importance of a dialogue about the
blatant use of inconspicuous sexuality in the success of media and coined it to
be forever the “wedding of sex and media”. While he marveled over the obvious
power of the media now and the media he had foreseen as a formulaically
accurate arena in which to gauge our evolution as a species as well as the
evolution of technology – he also and very rightfully, brought in elements of
neuroscience to the fore front and went on to illuminate the receptive public
of the connections between the loss of identity and violence as a result of blindly giving in to television anarchy.
McLuhanisms,
as his maxims were endearingly pegged, were engrained with evidence and thought
about how television and technology on the one hand was liberating to a
society’s standing and its endeavor to “continue on a higher plane” but on the
other was also cumulatively a tactic on the part of capitalists and those that
harbored an abrasive mentality towards mankind and all else. To him a “global
village” was an open territory for acts of selfishness and humanistic
debauchery – explaining the obvious and gradual decline of ethics and the birth
of the ferocious and less understood state-of-the-art modern. He qualifies
these statements with a direct allusion to the Advertising Industry where he
said “ Ad is only a substitute for the product” – meaning what remains to be
said about the undefined product will only be inferred through double entendre
and mesmerizing latent sexual connotations and subversive imagery. He connected
the effects of television to addiction and soporific opiates and the changes
that manifest as a result of the instruments people employ and influence others
by, during the course of their lives.
I enjoyed reading your post. You have a nice way with words and I agree with everything your saying. As I read about Marshall McLuhan a very interesting man and his concepts very interesting as well. As from your post I can see you did too. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteHi Nicole - thanks so much. I found the most interesting part of his saga to be that of the ability of the people around him to give him more than a listening ear. Especially in an era when women had been relegated to being "mad" for their iconoclastic ideas. I am especially glad that I don't live in that era - although it would change everything if time travel were an available option!
ReplyDeleteMcLuhan was certainly far ahead of his time. It is amazing how he was thinking of such concepts even as far back as the 1960’s. I do agree with his observation of sex in the media. Upon looking up commercials to write about on YouTube, the first hits that came up were commercials that used provocative imagery as its primary mode to sell the product. Yes, the effects of television can be just as addictive as a drug if not consumed in moderation; this is something that many people fail to realize until something comes up in their life to help them realize the importance of other factors in their lives.
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