from Part III - McLuhan and Technical Media
Introduction
The political, social and cultural transformations which we experience in a digital globalized media culture raise new questions about the impact of technology on society, but also about the ensuing consequences for the individual. In this context the work of Marshall McLuhan is experiencing a revival. Not only did McLuhan predict some of these developments, but his work developed in a time of deep social and technological changes, with the impact of television and the first satellite being sent into space. It is therefore fruitful to read McLuhan's work again in the context of our current media culture.
In this essay I want to reread McLuhan in order to understand, as Derrick de Kerckhove states, how his work can serve as a ‘filter or lens’ to conceptualize media in the twenty-first century. Therefore I would like to discuss the example of smartphones and their role in our current media culture. Considering that it is important to note the deep technological developments that McLuhan could neither experience nor predict, this case study discusses some of the aspects of ‘new media’ after McLuhan. Furthermore I want to discuss to what extent McLuhan provides us here with ideas for a critique of some of the developments we are currently facing.
Smartphones have become a central symbol of the astonishing speed with which digital media culture has developed over the last few years as well as of the deep transformations that have occurred.
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