McLuhan's phrase, "the medium is the message" is his best known and most misunderstood concept. Paul Levinson presents the accuracy of McLuhan's thinking unavailable while he was alive, and shows him as a man struggling to communicate in an electronic pattern via the straightjacket of paper. Levinson also examines why McLuhan's theories about media are more important to us today than when they were first written, and why the Wired generation is now turning to McLuhan's work to understand the global village in the digital age.
By exploring the technological influence in industries from publishing to politics, entertainment to business, McLuhan opened the doors for understanding the human relationship with technology. Levinson's own exploration of McLuhan's significance in the new electronic generation clarifies the prophetic insights, principles and constructs in McLuhan's work.
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BooksRun
Good
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$10.87
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Small World Books
Very Good |
$12.66
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J. Hood, Booksellers, Inc.
Good
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$16.87
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ErgodeBooks
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$22.68
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Bonita
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GridFreed
New |
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GridFreed
New |
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Griffin Books
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ErgodeBooks
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