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The Medium is the Massage (Paperback)

by Marshall McLuhan (Author), Quentin Fiore (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (24 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
The Medium is the Massage is Marshall McLuhan's most condensed, and perhaps most effective, presentation of his ideas. Using a layout style that was later copied by Wired, McLuhan and coauthor/designer Quentin Fiore combine word and image to illustrate and enact the ideas that were first put forward in the dense and poorly organized Understanding Media. McLuhan's ideas about the nature of media, the increasing speed of communication, and the technological basis for our understanding of who we are come to life in this slender volume. Although originally printed in 1967, the art and style in The Medium is the Massage seem as fresh today as in the summer of love, and the ideas are even more resonant now that computer interfaces are becoming gateways to the global village. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal
From the "I can't believe this went out of print" file come two of McLuhan's signature titles. Though a lot of this may seem like freaky rantings from the Sixties (LJ 6/1/67 and LJ 11/1/68, respectively), many of McLuhan's observations on technology, violence, etc., still ring true.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 160 pages
  • Publisher: Gingko Press (October 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1584230703
  • ISBN-13: 978-1584230700
  • Product Dimensions: 7 x 4.2 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #17,359 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #2 in  Books > Nonfiction > Social Sciences > Communication > Mass Communication
    #6 in  Books > Science > Technology > Technology & Society
    #20 in  Books > Reference > Words & Language > Communication

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Customer Reviews

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4.3 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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19 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I Get Goosebumps..., September 8, 2000
By Mark Valentine (Port Angeles, WA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I get goosebumps just thinking about reviewing this book wherein McLuhan coins the term "the global village." On the internet, 33 years after this book was published, McLuhan had the insight and perspicacity to see just how electronics will be changing us. He's more of an electronical anthropologist here.

The flash of the book has worn off some by now and the graphics, the photos and creative layout of the pages seems to be more of a period piece. Still, because this brief book portrays so many key concepts that currently fill us now. We do not notice the power of the media until we are someplace that does not have it. Like a fish out of the water, we take for granted the influence of the technology around us; we assume that they have been with us forever and we never slow down to challenge these concepts. So, thank God for McLuhan's book.

I've recommended this book to my students and it's fun to see how they read it (because it's so short) and open up to some of the concepts about the media's power. It's as if they had known it all along, but needed McLuhan's book to come along and draw it out of them.

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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars -The- seminal work about life as we know it, October 20, 1996
By A Customer
Marshall McLuhan is one of the most important thinkers of our century. Understanding his ideas and his perspective is -essential- for understanding what has happened to mankind in the last twenty thousand years, especially in this century, as our technology modifies us at an accelerated pace. That's what this book, _The Medium is the Massage_, is all about. I always recommend this book to anyone involved with technology, communications, or the future. Although he originally wrote his ideas in standard prose (he was an English professor), hardly anyone read his books -- let's face it, most of us won't wade through non-sensational nonfiction. So he produced this book to exploit the printed page in its hottest form, making his ideas as tasty and easy to swallow as a hot fudge sundae. This book is thus a living example of his thesis! Though the number of ideas per page is much smaller than in his standard works (much much smaller), it packs a powerful punch by delivering the key ideas connected to descriptive graphics (one picture is worth...). This book is to anyone involved in technology and the future what the Bible is to Christians or the Koran is to Moslems. Don't just get this book and read it -- consume it. The future of our civilization may depend on it.
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20 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wisdom from the Prophet of the Internet, June 19, 2006
Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980) never conceived of the Internet. But the great communications theorist understood where communications was going, and the revolutionary effects of its direction.

This book takes his sometimes impenetrable prose and places it in a context of compelling photographs, advertisements, and cartoons in order to dramatically illustrate the meaning of his words, and the radical effect that changes in communications technology have on the lives of all the world's citizens. "It is impossible to understand social and cultural changes without a knowledge of the workings of the media," he writes.

The Medium is the Massage begins and ends with quotes from Albert North Whitehead. The first is that "The major advances in civilization are processes that all but wreck the societies in which they occur." The last is that "It is the business of the future to be dangerous."

There always are jeremiads against the new by those who are accustomed to the old. McLuhan quotes Socrates: "The discovery of the alphabet will create forgetfulness in the learners' souls, because they will not use their memories; they will trust to the external written characters and not remember of themselves...You give your disciples not truth but only the semblance of truth; they will be heroes of many things, and will have learned nothing; they will appear to be omniscient and will generally know nothing."

The effects of the media on individuals are profound. "All media work us over completely. They are so pervasive in their personal, political, economic, aesthetic, pyschological, moral, ethical, and social consequences that they leave no part of us untouched, unaffected, unaltered. The medium is the massage. Any understanding of social and cultural change is impossible without a knowledge of the way media work as environments. All media are extensions of some human faculty--psychic or physical."

Media affect you, the individual citizen. "Electrical information devices for universal, tyrannical womb-to-tomb surveillance are causing a very serious dilemma between our claim to privacy and the community's need to know. The older, traditional ideas of private, isolated thoughts and actions--the patterns of mechanistic technologies--are very seriously threatened by new methods of instantaneous electric information retrieval, by the electrically computerized dossier bank--that one big gossip column that is unforgiving, unforgetful and from which there is no redemption, no erasure of early 'mistakes.' We have already reached a point where remedial control, born of knowledge of media and their total effects on all of us, must be exerted...."

Media affect your family. "The family circle has widened. The whirlpool of information fathered by the electic media--movies, Telstar, flight--far surpasses any possible influence mom and dad now bring to bear. Character no longer is shaped by only two earnest, fumbling experts. Now all the world's a sage."

Media affect your neighborhood. "Electric circuitry has overthrown the regime of 'time' and 'space' and pours upon us instantly and continuously the concerns of all other men. It has reconstitued dialogue on a global scale. Its message is Total Change, ending psychic, social, economic, and political parochialism. The old civic, state, and national groupings have become unworkable. Nothing can be further from the spirit of the the new technology than 'a place for everything and everything in its place.' You can't GO home again."

Media affect your education. "Today's television child is attuned to up-to-the-minute 'adult' news--inflation, rioting, war, taxes, crime, bathing beauties--and is bewildered when he enters the nineteenth century environment that still characterizes the educational establishment where information is scarce but ordered and structured by fragmented, classified patterns, subjects, and schedules. It is naturally an environment much like any factory set-up with its inventories and assembly lines."

Media affect your job. "From the fifteenth century to the twentieth century, there is a steady progress of fragmentation of the stages of work that constitute 'mechanization' and 'specialism.' These procedures cannot serve for survival or sanity in this new time. Under conditions of electric cicuitry, all the fragmented job patterns tend to blend once more into involving and demanding roles or forms of work that more and more resemble teaching, learning, and 'human' service, in the older sense of dedicated loyalty."

Media affect your government. "Nose-counting, a cherished part of the eighteenth century fragmentation process, has rapidly become a cumbersome and ineffectual form of social assessment in an envrionment of instant electric speeds. The public, in the sense of a great consensus of separate and distinct viewpoints, is finished. Today, the mass audience (the successor to the 'public') can be used as a creative, participating force. It is instead merely given packages of passive entertainment. Politics offers yesterday's answers to today's questions. A new form of 'politics' is emerging, and in ways we haven't yet noticed. The living room has become a voting booth. Participation via television in Freedom Marches, in war, revolution, pollution, and other events is changing EVERYTHING."

Media affect our relationships with groups of other citizens. "The shock of recognition. In an electric information environment, minority groups can no longer be contained, ignored. Too many people know too much about each other. Our new environment compels commitment and participation. We have become irrevocably involved with, and responsible for, each other. There is absolutely no inevitability as long as there is a willingness to contemplate what is happening."

This book is, in short, a superb introduction to McLuhan's thinking. Ideally, it would be read before any of McLuhan's other books. Understanding McLuhan takes some time and thought, but the effort is well worth it to understand today's media and today's world.

"Only the hand that erases can write the true thing," McLuhan quotes Meister Eckhardt as saying. McLuhan erases preconceptions of media being relatively insignificant, and demonstrates how the media affect the way each of us sees the world in which we live.

A memorable photo in the book is one of a middle-aged man dressed in a business suit and carrying a briefcase standing upon a surfboard, riding the waves. "In his amusement born of rational detachment of his own situation, Poe's mariner in 'The Descent Into the Maelstrom' staved off disaster by understanding the action of the whirlpool," says McLuhan's accompanying prose. "His insight offers a possible strategem for understanding our predicament, our electrically-configured whirl."

The last cartoon in the book--from the New Yorker in 1966--summarizes McLuhan's essential theme. A young man with a guitar discusses McLuhan with his father in a well-appointed library. "You see, Dad, Professor McLuhan says the enviroment that man creates becomes his medium for defining his role in it. The invention of type created linear, or sequential, thought, separating thought from action. Now, with TV and folk singing, thought and action are closer and social involvement is greater. We again live in a village. Get it?"

We all should get McLuhan. The development of Internet--likely even more transformative than television--has greatly revived interest in McLuhan's view of technological changes as changing us as people, and of creating a global village for all of us to live in. "We impose the form of the old on the content of the new. The malady lingers on," McLuhan warns. We should heed his warnings and recognize, embrace, and work for constructive improvements in the ever-changing world in which we live.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Amidst the chaos, some nuggets of truth do shine through.
The Medium is the Massage: An Inventory of Effects is a crazy little book (159 pages, mostly with images) that has been spouting some crazy ideas since its original publication in... Read more
Published 4 months ago by Miss Print

5.0 out of 5 stars Revolutionary ... even now, 40 years later

One of the great piece of feedback I got from my boss (and independently from our COO) was that while I am close enough to technology and design I am not really in the... Read more
Published 7 months ago by Dean McRobie

1.0 out of 5 stars Shallow
This book is filled with un-artful pictures because it has nothing to say. A 3-year-old could produce better artwork, and you'd learn more by picking up a magazine and a coffee at... Read more
Published 14 months ago by Eric Radman

5.0 out of 5 stars So visionary that the most important aspects are yet to come!
Yes, it's amazing that Marshall McLuhan foresaw the internet in the 1960s. However, that is only part of his message. Read more
Published 15 months ago by Patrick R. Bowman

1.0 out of 5 stars What is the point of this book?
This book was recommended to me and I bought it. I have no idea what the point of this book is...it's just a bunch of tweaked out pictures. I thought it was... Read more
Published 17 months ago by ViperMike

4.0 out of 5 stars Very good book. Almost prophetic.
Some of McLuhans stuff is really unaccessible for average readers... It's deep stuff... BUT we see much of what he was talking about occuring in our modern day. Read more
Published on May 15, 2007 by Craiger

5.0 out of 5 stars My view of the world ...
... was profoundly influenced by this book. I read it about 30 years ago. I'm pleasantly surprised to find it still in print.
Published on December 16, 2006 by Daniel Brockman

5.0 out of 5 stars Where are the Audio and Video Versions?
Yes, back in the late 60's or early 70's there were both audio and a movie version of this title. I use to own the LP album and frequently watched the short movie version that... Read more
Published on October 20, 2006 by Clyde H. Hedlund

5.0 out of 5 stars To Digital or Not to Digital; Was That The Question? Chocolate/Vanilla, Either/Or Options?
Do printed Words create a sick society of antisocial eggheads with their noses hovering habitually above pages of ink? Duh, what? He said what when? Read more
Published on December 4, 2005 by Linda G. Shelnutt

5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Place to Start
First published in 1967, the pithy aphorisms and ideas of 'The Medium is the Massage' have been drawn from McLuhan's many other books and articles. Read more
Published on March 15, 2005 by CyberChimp

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The Medium is the Massage

Brief profile of Marshall McLuhan - Media Guru and Philosopher. 1911-1980   First published in 1967, the outstanding design by Quentin Fiore helped make this something of a pop classic. According to the official McLuhan website, the title ("massage") ...

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Created on May 04, 2006, last edited on May 20, 2007.

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