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  1. McLuhan's first book, The Mechanical Bride: Folklore of Industrial Man (1951), is a pioneering study in the field now known as popular culture. In the book, McLuhan turns his attention to analysing and commenting on numerous examples of persuasion in contemporary popular culture.

  2. Jun 28, 2024 · Marshall McLuhan was a Canadian communications theorist and educator, whose aphorism “the medium is the message” summarized his view of the potent influence of television, computers, and other electronic disseminators of information in shaping styles of thinking and thought, whether in sociology,

  3. Jan 17, 2012 · Marshall McLuhan Watch a Heritage Minute about the visionary media guru Marshall McLuhan, who foresaw the impact of new electronic communication systems on human society, culture, and the economy. From Historica Canada.

  4. Jun 11, 2018 · Marshall McLuhan. Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980), Canadian professor of literature and culture, developed a theory of media and human development claiming that "the medium is the message." Herbert Marshall McLuhan was born in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on July 21, 1911. His father was a real estate and insurance salesman, his mother an ...

  5. McLuhan was still a twenty-year old undergraduate at the University of Manitoba, in western Canada, in the dirty thirties, when he wrote in his diary that he would never become an academic. He was learning in spite of his professors, but he would become a professor of English in spite of himself.

  6. Nov 6, 2023 · In this article, we delve into the life and work of Marshall McLuhan. We explore the key concepts and theories that have shaped the study of Media and Communication. The Life of Marshall McLuhan. Marshall McLuhan was a Canadian media theorist born in Edmonton, Alberta, in 1911.

  7. Marshall McLuhan, a.k.a. the “Oracle of the Electronic Age” and the “Patron Saint” of Wired magazine, coined the term “global village,” taught us that “the medium is the message,” prophesied the impact of the electronic technologies, and established the field that we now call media studies.