La galassia Gutenberg
La galassia Gutenberg
Since its first appearance in 1962, the impact of The Gutenberg Galaxy has been felt around the world. It gave us the concept of the global village; that phrase has now been translated, along with the rest of the book, into twelve languages, from Japanese to Serbo-Croat. It helped establish Marshall McLuhan as the original 'media guru.' More than 200,000 copies are in prin
...morePaperback, 439 pages
Published
2011
by Armando Curcio Editore
(first published 1962)
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Basically what McLuhan argues in his book is that the invention and diffusion of Gutenberg's printing process marked the passage from a balanced kind of linguistic communication - where each sense was taken account of - to a tiranny of its visual component. Mobile characters, with their easy and quick reproducing capability, therefore, inadvertently brought us to cultural homogeneity and repetitivness.
This essay was first published in the early 60's and I found it an interesting and stimulating...more
This essay was first published in the early 60's and I found it an interesting and stimulating...more
Jun 24, 2010
kingshearte
marked it as unfinished
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
non-fiction,
word-nerd-books
I didn't finish this book. It was enough of a slog that I figured I'd muddle my way through it, but intersperse other books along the way, but no. I suddenly came to the realization that I had no idea what I was reading. I'd made it almost 100 pages, and all I had retained from those pages was that he starts the book discussing King Lear, but I don't know why, and that people from literary cultures apparently see differently than people from non-literary cultures. That's all. It was one of those...more
Apr 26, 2013
Debbie Morrison
is currently reading it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
current-non_fiction
I'm enjoying this book a great deal so far. A challenging read, but worth it. Written by a Canadian scholar and published by the University of Toronto Press.
Book Description: "Since its first appearance in 1962, the impact of The Gutenberg Galaxy has been felt around the world. It gave us the concept of the global village; that phrase has now been translated, along with the rest of the book, into twelve languages, from Japanese to Serbo-Croat. It helped establish Marshall McLuhan as the original...more
Book Description: "Since its first appearance in 1962, the impact of The Gutenberg Galaxy has been felt around the world. It gave us the concept of the global village; that phrase has now been translated, along with the rest of the book, into twelve languages, from Japanese to Serbo-Croat. It helped establish Marshall McLuhan as the original...more
Jul 20, 2012
Josh
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
information-theory,
nonfiction
Very insightful look at how information technologies shape all other aspects of culture. I didn't follow everything in the book, but I did get a lot of ideas. I originally got interested in this book when the World Wide Web was beginning. Although McLuhan wrote in 1960, what he saw about the electronic age beginning with the telegraph, radio, film, and TV has continued and intensified with the Internet. This book helped me see a lot of my assumptions about the way the world is based on print cul...more
Oct 15, 2011
Timothy
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
information-studies,
philosophy-theory
This was a fun and inspiring book, and there were points at which I would have considered just giving it five stars despite some of its obvious flaws and the fact that it is quite dated. I really like the way that McLuhan constructs his narrative by quoting other writers and commenting on the quoted material. I found this to be wonderfully transparent and to give a sense of the relative weight of each author in relation to McLuhan's thought. It sometimes felt like I was reading the most enjoyabl...more
Clearly a work of illumination and like a polished multi-faceted crystal something you can turn around in your hand to try to see more of its brilliance and its light, the reader will derive a sense of the measure of the ratio that has been lost/superseded by what McLuhan refers to as "visual stress" in the outering by the homogenizing technology of print of one of the senses, that is, the gaining of fixed perspective for the price of losing the collective conscious. It exemplifies its own outer...more
MML S. 141
"An age in rapid transition is one which exists on the frontier between two cultures and between conflicting technologies. Every moment of its consciousness is an act of translation of each of these cultures into the other."
Die Gutenbergdruckereien haben zweihundert Jahre lang kaum etwas anderes veroeffentlicht als die mittelalterlichen Handschriften. Originaere neue Literatur wurde erst ab dem 18. Jahrhundert geschaffen. Die Leserschaft vorher fragte nach den alten Texten in handliche...more
"An age in rapid transition is one which exists on the frontier between two cultures and between conflicting technologies. Every moment of its consciousness is an act of translation of each of these cultures into the other."
Die Gutenbergdruckereien haben zweihundert Jahre lang kaum etwas anderes veroeffentlicht als die mittelalterlichen Handschriften. Originaere neue Literatur wurde erst ab dem 18. Jahrhundert geschaffen. Die Leserschaft vorher fragte nach den alten Texten in handliche...more
Nov 08, 2008
Moments of Kabir
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
missing-knowledge
This is not "my review" but it is related to what people can learn and get from the book....
The global village
In the early 1960s, McLuhan wrote that the visual, individualistic print culture would soon be brought to an end by what he called "electronic interdependence": when electronic media replace visual culture with aural/oral culture. In this new age, humankind will move from individualism and fragmentation to a collective identity, with a "tribal base." McLuhan's coinage for this new social...more
The global village
In the early 1960s, McLuhan wrote that the visual, individualistic print culture would soon be brought to an end by what he called "electronic interdependence": when electronic media replace visual culture with aural/oral culture. In this new age, humankind will move from individualism and fragmentation to a collective identity, with a "tribal base." McLuhan's coinage for this new social...more
Fascinating study on the impact of the printed word. The author does wander a bit too close to the podium at times, but his deep scholarship opened my eyes. In particular I learned a lot about the fallacy of "resacralizing" our lives (Mircea Eliade's term) and what such an action would entail, that it would require a return to a world lived by all the senses rather than the one that has overcome the West, the world of vision. While it is odd to be reading a book about the negative impact of read...more
An astonishing book, a dry one, about the effects of the Gutenberg press, a device that shocked the church, brought about new religions, started wars and changed the human race. In different sections, the Greeks complain that more books will make readers lazy. Readers won't have to memorize a book because the presence of more books will make that unnecessary. In other sections, the author talks about the fact that Balinese plays, not books, teach the Balinese what is right and wrong.
Mar 18, 2013
Eddy Allen
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
arts-and-historical
Since its first appearance in 1962, the impact of The Gutenberg Galaxy has been felt around the world. It gave us the concept of the global village; that phrase has now been translated, along with the rest of the book, into twelve languages, from Japanese to Serbo-Croat. It helped establish Marshall McLuhan as the original 'media guru.' More than 200,000 copies are in print. The reissue of this landmark book reflects the continuing importance of McLuhan's work for contemporary readers.
Read all the way through this a couple of times and just had it sitting around and picked it up to read random spots. Lots of great ideas about antique perspectives. Got me into don quixote. Its really impossible to talk about McLuhan without sounding trite. If you don't catch on right away just by every McLuhan book and listen to every McLuhan recording on ubuweb and watch Videodrome and eventually you'll be sucked in by his ideas and dialectic and you'll never be the same.
As with all of his works, this one, as well as "Understanding Media, The Extensions of Man", had a huge impact on me. They're not the easiest books to read, but they will give you a new appreciation of just how important experience retrieval is; which is to say the major means of how we store and retrieve experience over time has a tremendous impact on how we think of, and see, the world around us.
Yes, at first glance this book is an incoherent mess. The basic syntactical unit of the book is the two page micro essay and there are no clear chapter/subject divisions. McLuhan also introduces a number of idiosyncratic terms which he doesn't bother to define. But at around 100 pages things start to come together and McLuhan's commentary on the implications of movable type and the book as commodity(and the role of the written word in the articulation of nations, sophisticated economies, globali...more
Either completely brilliant or total hogwash, I'm not qualified to say. Sometimes McLuhan sounds like he's simply wandered off on some flight of fancy, and his tendency to being in Shakespeare, Milton, or Blake as proof of his assertions ("Here in King Lear you can see how Shakespeare was discussing the ways in which print liquifies our sense of geographical and personal boundaries!") is baffling at times. But for all the fluidity and scatteredness of his style, there's no doubting he's expressi...more
Classic study of the influence of media technology on human sensorium, specifically the printed word. A must-read.
Recommended follow-up to "The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to our Brains".
Feb 04, 2013
Josh
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
thinking,
research-media
Very good, and very dense. This is one to process slowly.
This is my first book-length foray into the world of Marshall McLuhan, and I feel very torn about this book. While it seems reductionist at points (setting up a number of not-necessarily-true binary oppositions), it seems to pretty much "get it right." I agree with his main statement that we are all "typographic people," and I think this is a good lead-in to further studies in media.
Kind of choppy in how each short chapter carries on the theme of the book. McLuhan cites plenty of examples along the course of history of writing and print to etch out a strong case for what he is most famous for discussing: the technology in which we encode and send messages as a society influences us and our civilization as well.
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Herbert Marshall McLuhan CC (July 21, 1911 - December 31, 1980) was a Canadian educator, philosopher, and scholar — a professor of English literature, a literary critic, and a communications theorist. McLuhan's work is viewed as one of the cornerstones of the study of media theory. McLuhan is known for coining the expressions "the medium is the message" and the "global village".
More about Marshall McLuhan...
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“A point of view can be a dangerous luxury when substituted for insight and
understanding.”
—
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understanding.”
“Schizophrenia may be a necessary consequence of literacy. [p. 32]”
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Jul 14, 2011 11:50am