Marshall McLuhan was one of the most brilliant and original thinkers of
the 20th century. He was so far ahead of his time that he predicted the
future and offered a critique of human behavior in a media saturated
world that is perhaps more valuable in today's Internet age than it was
in his own time.
McLuhan pioneered the study of Media, unified Art and Science, and
warned us about the perils of a televised, computerized,
famous-for-15-minutes, social media world. A world where we would live
in each other's faces, and become so alike, so isolated, so anonymous
that violence would become a scream of identity, a way of saying, I am
not invisible. McLuhan tried to teach us to guard against these
dehumanizing, debasing effects of technology, and a thousand other
things, but we got reality television anyway.
The centennial celebration of McLuhan's life and the re-release of his
books has led to a surge of new interest in his thinking and teachings.
McLuhan For Beginners provides an essential introduction that is
clear, comprehensive, and easy to remember. It is full of wise and witty
art by Susan Willmarth that is a perfect match to W. Terrence Gordon's
writing. McLuhan envisioned the media generated Global Village before it
existed, and no one since McLuhan has described its allure and pitfalls
better.