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The Medium is the Massage Paperback – Illustrated, August 1, 2001

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 876 ratings

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30 years after its publication Marshall McLuhan's The Medium is the Massage remains his most entertaining, provocative and piquant book.

With every technological and social advancement, McLuhan's proclamation that "the media work us over completely" becomes more evident and plain. In his words, so pervasive are they in their personal, political, economic, aesthetic, psychological, moral, ethical and social consequences that they leave no part of us untouched, unaffected, or unaltered.

McLuhan suggests modern audiences enjoy MainStream media as soothing, enjoyable, and relaxing; however, the pleasure we find in the MainStream media is deceiving, because/as/since the changes between society and technology are incongruent, perpetuating an Age of Anxiety.

McLuhan's remarkable observation that "societies have always been shaped more by the nature of the media by which men communicate than by the content of the communication" is undoubtedly more relevant today than ever before. With the rise of the internet and the explosion of the digital revolution there has never been a better time to revisit Marshall McLuhan.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

These laws of media, which McLuhan calls “the tetrad,” can help one to understand and, perhaps, respond constructively to the new medium…. Some of the implications seem prophetic. -- Euchner, Jim ― Research-Technology Management (Journal)

About the Author

Herbert Marshall McLuhan was a Canadian philosopher. His work is one of the cornerstones of the study of media theory. He began his teaching career as a professor of English at several universities in the U.S. and Canada before moving to the University of Toronto in 1946, where he remained for the rest of his life. McLuhan coined the expression "the medium is the message," the term global village and predicted the World Wide Web almost 30 years before it was invented. He was an influential fixture in media discourse.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Gingko Press (August 1, 2001)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 160 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1584230703
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1584230700
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 7.2 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 4.1 x 0.6 x 7 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 876 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
876 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book engaging and thought-provoking. They appreciate the visual style and pictures, describing them as compelling and well-designed. However, opinions differ on the interest level, with some finding it interesting and engaging, while others consider it trite and facile. There are mixed reviews regarding the writing style and ease of comprehension, with some finding it simple and understandable, while others feel it's too artsy and hard to follow at times. The era is also mentioned as contemporary or timeless, depending on how customers view it.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

36 customers mention "Thought provoking"32 positive4 negative

Customers find the book thought-provoking with interesting philosophical passages in the early chapters. They say it has a good epystemological approach for its time and opens their eyes to the medium through which information is portrayed. The book continues to inform the intellectual class and students of culture, making it relevant more than ever.

"...This work continues to inform the intellectual class and students of culture...." Read more

"...The words are prophetic and penetrating. The book imagery and designs are a delight to anyone who likes the esthetics of futuristic 60s and 70s art." Read more

"A very thought-provoking book indeed... I'm taking a class on History of Media and Communication, and we're using this as part of our course..." Read more

"..."Ours is a brand-new world of allatonceness. `Time' has ceased, `space' has vanished. We now live in a global village...a simultaneous happening...." Read more

35 customers mention "Readability"35 positive0 negative

Customers find the book easy to read and engaging. They appreciate the great content and stunning visuals. The book is short but insightful, with fine typography and perfect graphic reproduction. Readers mention it's a good book for left-over Hippies who don't like to read.

"...It is a very entertaining book although. The book contains pictures on every other page. The pictures are very relevant and mind-provoking...." Read more

"A short but insightful book. Please note that the author made such incisive observation in 1967 and it is still valid today." Read more

"...it for a film class, here ya go - if you're just looking for an interesting read, here ya go." Read more

"...I read it in 9th grade and to this very day, it is still my favorite book that I have ever read...." Read more

15 customers mention "Visual style"15 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the visual style of the book. They find the artwork great and the presentation enjoyable. The book is well-designed with a cover printed on luxurious paper. Readers appreciate the fine typography and graphic reproduction.

"...The words are prophetic and penetrating. The book imagery and designs are a delight to anyone who likes the esthetics of futuristic 60s and 70s art." Read more

"...This graphic novel (another refreshing way to present argument about media) is quite a collectible to those who wish to understand more about media..." Read more

"...of media-content delivery have on society and find the presentation and style enjoyable...." Read more

"My son needed this book for a college computer class. It looked interesting so I read it...." Read more

11 customers mention "Pictures"9 positive2 negative

Customers find the pictures in the book compelling and thought-provoking. They say the images are on every other page, but some find them tiring. The book provides fantastic dissections of visual paradigms and the impact of new media.

"...Published in black-and-white, it portrays a series of images that move the reader through the contention that media – particularly electronic media..." Read more

"...It is a very entertaining book although. The book contains pictures on every other page. The pictures are very relevant and mind-provoking...." Read more

"...John Berger's Ways of Seeing and About Looking are fantastic dissections of visual paradigms and the impact of new media on our understanding of..." Read more

"...It looked interesting so I read it. There are a lot of photos and images that in some cases emphasizes the author's topics...." Read more

9 customers mention "Interest"6 positive3 negative

Customers have mixed reviews about the book. Some find it interesting and bizarre, with tidbits interspersed among lengths of gibberish. Others feel it's trite and facile, with poor binding quality that makes the book unreadable before finishing it.

"...worth of caffeine to the book and make it feel hyperactive and almost psychedelic. Black and white pictures are on nearly every page...." Read more

"...It's really interesting...." Read more

"...The cover by Shephard Fairey should serve as a warning that it's trite and facile...." Read more

"Interesting tidbits interspersed among lengths of gibberish." Read more

7 customers mention "Ease of comprehension"3 positive4 negative

Customers have different views on the writing style. Some find it simple and understandable, making the book accessible. Others feel the style is overly artsy and difficult to follow at times, with some finding it trite and facile.

"...That is not to say that the style of writing is bad. But it can become dissonance that obscures the message it is trying to convey...." Read more

"...Talk about burying the lead. It’s simple, excellent, and unified in its message." Read more

"...cover by Shephard Fairey should serve as a warning that it's trite and facile...." Read more

"A very unique style of writing but easily comprehend. In other words, the tone is simple and understandable." Read more

7 customers mention "Era"3 positive4 negative

Customers have different views on the book's era. Some find it contemporary and timeless despite its age, while others consider it outdated with outdated information.

"Historically relevant, message and the text is very dated. And I grew up in the sixties." Read more

"...It’s amazing how contemporary this book feels despite its age...." Read more

"OK, a classic so kind of a must read but in this day and age, it's definitely dated." Read more

"Marvellously insightful given that it is over 50 yrs old!..." Read more

Media studies from a true visionary
4 out of 5 stars
Media studies from a true visionary
The Medium is the Massage: An Inventory of Effects by Marshall McLuhan and Quentin Fiore is a now classic work from 1967. It came across as a library donation twenty years ago and we rejected this duplicate copy because it had a ripped cover. I was interested in McLuhan since I was (then) a student at the University of Toronto. What kind of a fan of the Beatles and sixties culture would I be if I didn't share an interest in McLuhan and his visionary media observations? At the time of its initial publication, The Medium is the Massage must have seemed far out. The book is a mishmash of text and visuals, some pages full of words and some with next to nothing. You could turn twenty pages in two minutes or spend twenty minutes on two pages. The reading experience felt like watching a TV show, with the main show occupying the most time followed by brief spurts that were like commercials.Forty-five years later, I can see how the book's format and the message within presaged the effects of worldwide media and the publishing industry:"The Medium is the Massage" reveals how the medium, or process, of our time--electric technology--is reshaping and restructuring patterns of social interdependence and every aspect of your personal life. How it is forcing you to reconsider and re-evaluate practically every thought and every institution you formerly took for granted."The book's appearance, that of mixing visuals and text, reminded me of later novels such as Douglas Coupland's Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture and Dennis Rodman's memoirs Bad As I Wanna Be and Walk on the Wild Side, all of which were written for readers with ever declining attention spans.After Arab Spring, I could only read the following remark with mouth agape:"Youth instinctively understands the present environment--the electric drama. It lives mythically and in depth. This is the reason for the great alienation between generations. Wars, revolutions, civil uprisings are interfaces within the new environments created by electric informational media."Twitter and Facebook are these new environments which affect us all, even those like myself who adamantly remain selectively disconnected. I couldn't come to this conclusion fast enough, for McLuhan stated later:"The instantaneous world of electric informational media involves all of us, all at once. No detachment or frame is possible."Technological advances scare some of us, and I count myself among the scaredy-cats. My reaction to dealing with the future? McLuhan must be reading my mind:"The past went that-a-way. When faced with a totally new situation, we tend always to attach ourselves to the objects, to the flavor of the most recent past. We look at the present through a rear-view mirror. We march backwards into the future. Suburbia lives imaginatively in Bonanza-land."For an introduction into McLuhan's media studies, The Medium is the Massage is 160 pages of wondrous futurisms. Some of the text seems rather Joycean in structure; I would read passages over and over and the only reason I did not finish this book in one day was that I dwelt on this complex and ungrammatical phraseology. The global village had certainly come to town and McLuhan was its first mayor.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2022
    Had to get this as a required text for a film class but honestly a VERY introspective read with interesting takes on our society as a whole and what we do with our media. If you need it for a film class, here ya go - if you're just looking for an interesting read, here ya go.
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 27, 2020
    In the 1960s, McLuhan presaged the communications age through his studies of “electronic media.” His thoughts shone light on the way forward and are now standards of understanding today. For instance, he coined the term “global village” in showing the ways of globalization.

    This work consists of much more than text. Published in black-and-white, it portrays a series of images that move the reader through the contention that media – particularly electronic media – “massages” messages to us. McLuhan squarely places the focus on the nature of the media.

    He looks to history to see how Gutenberg transformed the world through the advent of print media. He contends that television, movies, and other pictorial media begun the transform the world in the 1950s and 1960s. It made the world a smaller place, a global village, where people in far-flung places of the world borrow and learn from each other.

    To him, electronic media are non-linear, unlike books. Rather, they unite thought and action in a way that books do not. This allows fields like psychology to flourish as instant reactions become more important. In its production, each page is adorned with images that reinforce McLuhan’s message. While such things are commonplace over fifty years later, this type of presentation was pioneered in these works. We can now observe through studying contemporary discourse that this work was spot-on in its predictions.

    For me, as a software developer and student of culture, this work simply reinforces what I see around me. I spend a lot of my time on the computer and Internet. I see first-hand that McLuhan’s theses worked out. Still, I found this image-oriented book very stimulating. All of the poignant pictures tired out my eyes. It reminded me of the electronic media that are now standard, like the electronic news or even Facebook and Instagram.

    This work continues to inform the intellectual class and students of culture. Those interested in the history of ideas will be particularly attracted to this work. Those, like me, who are concerned with the role of computers in society will find this work compelling. As commonly said, we live in the Information Age, and this book sketched the outlines, fifty-plus years ago, of what that would look like. Many say that it is the most mature expression of McLuhan’s thought. For that reason, it’s worth attending to his perspective today.
    13 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 22, 2023
    A short but insightful book. Please note that the author made such incisive observation in 1967 and it is still valid today.
  • Reviewed in the United States on April 9, 2012
    If I were a superior intellect obsessed with the effects of media who happened to indulge in mind-altering drugs and who enjoyed emulating the style of poetry slams, I might be able to create a work comparable to Marshall McLuhan and Quentin Fiore's "The Medium is the Massage".

    Or at least I might have been able to enjoy it.

    Alas, none of the aforementioned qualities apply to me. And given the popularity of this book in academia, my intellect is apparently lower than even my nearly non-existent desire to attend a poetry slam. Clearly, I am not the intended audience.

    Who, then, is this book suited for? The answer to that is best given after taking a few moments to examine what the book is about and how it is presented. We must understand both what it is about and how it goes about being--and isn't being what it is (whatever it is) all about? (If that last sentence elicited a, "whoahhh...heavy dude..." response from you, you may be a part of the book's intended audience.)

    Let me start with how it is presented since you must be able to tolerate its appearance and taste if you are to consume its contents and benefit from the nutrition contained within. Consider the following excerpt:
    "Ours is a brand-new world of allatonceness. `Time' has ceased, `space' has vanished. We now live in a global village...a simultaneous happening. We are back in acoustic space. We have begun again to structure the primordial feeling, the tribal emotions.... (63)"

    I can imagine McLuhan on stage, wearing a beret, smoking a cigarette, holding a glass of pinot noir and speaking melodramatically into a microphone to a crowd of wine and coffee sippers. They applaud while I scratch my head and pray this place has tequila and transcripts of the show.

    That is not to say that the style of writing is bad. But it can become dissonance that obscures the message it is trying to convey. I would not dispute that Shakespeare's sonnets are poetic masterpieces, but if you try to use that style to educate me on the effects of mass media on society, I will likely become bewildered and remain uneducated. People who enjoy his sonnets, however, may be enthralled.

    The visual elements add the equivalent of more than four shots of espresso's worth of caffeine to the book and make it feel hyperactive and almost psychedelic. Black and white pictures are on nearly every page. The text varies in size from tiny to one letter being as tall as the page. Sentences may be black or white, upside down, diagonal or backwards. One page may have several paragraphs followed by one sentence that spans multiple pages.

    It is possible that his style is simply too rich and cultured for my peasant-born palate (or that it is meant to be read while listening to Pink Floyd and dropping acid--I did not try that approach, though). After all, many disagree with me. In his 2004 article "A Media Ecology Review", (Communication Research Trends: Vol. 23, No. 2, p.7), Lance Straite discusses how other works by McLuhan are "challenging" because of his writing style. However, he says that "The Medium is the Massage" is, "effective because it summarizes McLuhan's key concepts and shows as well as tells the reader what McLuhan is referring to... [and] remains a good introduction to McLuhan's approach."

    Those "key concepts" constitute the book's intellectual nutritional value--and there is a lot for your brain to absorb. While I found the style off-putting, I choked it down like a heaping bowl of spinach and beets (they're good for you!) and, after processing it, appreciate the book's content.

    The depth of the book is conveyed in the title. According to McLuhan's official website (maintained by his family), "The Medium is the Massage" was originally supposed to be "The Medium is the Message". When McLuhan saw the error, he told the printer to, "leave it alone! It's great and right on target!"

    McLuhan apparently loved wordplay (as can be seen in the book) and thought "massage" could be read in four different--yet relevant--ways: "message", "massage", "mess age" and "mass age".

    The core concept of the book is how the technology of media--the physical, sensual being of it, not the content it delivers--"massages" our behavior; how it pushes and pulls us. McLuhan is not concerned with what we see and hear when we watch T.V., listen to the radio or see a billboard but rather how the media--the channels by which the content is delivered--affect us.

    Few things illustrate this better than one concept he famously coined: "the global village". In her 2008 article "Understanding the Implications of a Global Village" (Reason and Respect: Vol. 4, Iss. 1, p.1), Violet Dixon wrote that McLuhan used the term to, "describe the phenomenon of the world's culture shrinking and expanding at the same time due to pervasive technological advances that allow for instantaneous sharing of culture."

    McLuhan explores how changes in media have impacted how we act when we are alone, how we interact with our family, neighbors, people far away, schools, the government and more. He examines media as an almost biological extension of ourselves and why that matters.

    So who is this book for?

    This is a 5-Star book for readers who are hungry to explore the impact that the tools of media-content delivery have on society and find the presentation and style enjoyable. For such readers, the book is a buffet of intellectual delicacies. The concepts will fill your intellectual belly while leaving you eager to digest it so you can come back for more.

    It is a 4-Star book for students (and professors) of disciplines for whom understanding the role of mass media is important but for whom the greater motivator for attaining that understanding is to satisfy a requirement and less one that is born of passion for the topic. These particular readers are also not turned off by the style and do not struggle too much with the material.

    It is a 3-Star book for students like those above but who may struggle with the presentation and taste and may have to choke it down. However, digesting it can greatly strengthen their understanding of mass media. Class discussions and supplemental reading materials may be of great value to them.
    54 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 29, 2024
    This book is a work of art as well as cultural commentary. The words are prophetic and penetrating. The book imagery and designs are a delight to anyone who likes the esthetics of futuristic 60s and 70s art.
  • Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2011
    I thought this book was "Understanding Media". Simply mistaken identity. The Ideas expressed in this book are not well described. It is a very entertaining book although. The book contains pictures on every other page. The pictures are very relevant and mind-provoking. It was a very quick read. Most pages are not filled all the way with text. The text also varies between large and regular sized prints. My anticipation with held as I flipped each page. I expected to get a better understanding of media. It seemed as though the book only tells the reader that media effects us in more ways than most assume. If you know this, dont buy the book. I was informed that media effects us in mostly negative ways before reading this book and was hoping to get a better explanation. I still recommend buying this book over most others. Almost as good as I expected.
    One person found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Consultor Externo
    5.0 out of 5 stars Interesante.
    Reviewed in Mexico on October 13, 2023
    Buenas ilustraciones. Información relevante. Contento con la compra.
  • Ray
    5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 2, 2024
    A very short and simple message, I read this after Simulacra and Simulation. It was very impressive for the size of it!
  • jo simons
    5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic
    Reviewed in India on August 18, 2021
    Delighted, what a classic and important book. Delighted. Thank you.
  • BAGINAMA-DOMBI Bonaventure
    5.0 out of 5 stars Les Britanniques et l'Afrique Sub-Sahara
    Reviewed in France on September 22, 2019
    Pour mes recherches en sciences sociales et politiques
  • Aroundbarcelona
    5.0 out of 5 stars McLuhan no pasa de moda
    Reviewed in Spain on December 3, 2018
    Este libro es una maravilla. Sigue siendo muy vigente. Todo lo que dice McLuhan sobre la 'revolución electrónica' es muy válido para la 'revolución digital' de los últimos años. El diseño facilita la lectura y sirve de ejemplo visual