DocumentCode
1521483
Title
Marshall Mcluhan and computer conferencing
Author
Levinson, P.
Issue
1
fYear
1986
fDate
3/1/1986 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
9
Lastpage
11
Abstract
Marshall McLuhan´s writing style has long been a source of fascination and frustration to the scholarly community. Instead of sequentially developed paragraphs and chapters, McLuhan´s work often took the form of numerous free-standing commentaries, usually not more than a few pages in length, each self-sustaining yet revolving around some sort of central theme. This `holographic´ style turns out to have much in common with the commentaries produced by participants in a computer conference, where individuals engage in multi-dimensional dialogue through comments of usually 20-60 lines of length around several related themes. The similarities in the textures of computer conferences and the books of McLuhan-who knew nothing about computer conferencing when he wrote his books-can aid in understanding both the computer conference as a literary form and the style of McLuhan.
Keywords
electronic mail; technical presentation; teleconferencing; Marshall McLuhan; commentaries; computer conference; computer conferencing; free-standing commentaries; literary form; multi-dimensional dialogue; writing style; Educational institutions; Humans; Media; Microcomputers; Presses; Writing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Professional Communication, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0361-1434
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPC.1986.6449008
Filename
6449008
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