Marshall McLuhan on tribalization and the loss of identity in the global village

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  • čas přidán 6. 11. 2017
  • In 1964, Canadian media philosopher Marshall McLuhan provided the first critical analysis of the impact modern communication was having on our species in his book ‘Understanding Media.’ Electric communication, as he called it, was such a fast emerging technology that our behavioural adaptations to stimulus could not cope with the rapid new connections being made across the globe.
    In this interview from 40 years ago, McLuhan argues that the disruptive force of electric communication had stripped us of our traditional identities, leaving us confused and susceptible to manipulation by forces beyond our control. He calls the global village a place of ‘arduous interfaces and very abrasive situations.’
    New forms of tribalization would emerge, leaving us prone to hostile encounters not limited by geographic or social boundaries.
    Today, with automated systems filtering our social media feeds, the narratives of our reality are manufactured by machines rather than community and tactile media. We know these systems of information can be manipulated by deliberate agents, through targeted disinformation and fake news. I originally produced this video essay in 2013, before the rise and fall of the social media savvy terror state Daesh and before the apparent Russian manipulation of the U.S. elections and political system in 2016.
    One of the challenges of McLuhan is that his writing is often as clear as reading tea leaves. Originally heralded as a cipher of the modern era, his philosophy was used in the early 90’s by futurists to claim that the revolution of Silicon Valley would bring about a new utopia of global consciousness. Instead, I find this warning to be a poignant message very relevant today.
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Komentáře • 5

  • @nuqwestr
    @nuqwestr Před 2 lety +2

    Yeah, he had it all predicted, the medium is the message, no one really understood what he was talking about. He did not care about bandwidth or issues with signal to noise ratios when it came to communication, he wanted to understand how the method of communication affected human behavior. His take on the transition from oral communication to the abstraction of the phonetic alphabet made us who were are today, but digital media would be regressive, eliminating individual agency and returning us to the collective tribal nature. We have proof all around that has occurred.

  • @Spooki_Gh0st
    @Spooki_Gh0st Před 5 lety +2

    yo, what song is this?!

  • @jojoinks
    @jojoinks Před 6 lety +2

    Hi. Do you know where I can find the full interview of this?

    • @RayRoth
      @RayRoth Před 2 lety

      Do a search for -> Marshall McLuhan in Conversation with Mike McManus. TVO Interview from 1977.