Friday, February 24, 2017

McLuhan Predicts Cellphone... and more (1965)

Marshall McLuhan, media guru of the late 1960s and 1970s, predicted the cellphone in 1965! McLuhan explained the significance of digital media prior to the invention of the personal computer and cellphone technology. Our evidence? An article from May 5, 1965 in The New Yorker magazine. The Talk of the Town column at the front of that issue features  a piece entitled “The McLuhan Metaphor .” The article’s publication coincided with the New York World’s Fair. You remember the World’s Fair in Flushing, Queens, with the famous Unisphere, the globe used in the movie Men in Black…? The globe is still there, not far from LaGuardia Airport and adjacent  to the U.S. Open tennis stadium. The globe is a perfect metaphor for the insights of Marshall McLuhan, the man who coined the phrase “global village” to define the world we now live in. But the real action that May was happening in Brooklyn, the next borough over, where McLuhan delivered a talk at a Presbyterian church.

The New Yorker author describes McLuhan’s lecture at Spencer Memorial Church in Brooklyn and quotes several startling prophecies included in his remarks: “(He) predicted a happy day when everyone will have his own portable computer to cope with the dreary business of digesting information.”

“Dr. McLuhan next suggested the possibility of a new technology that would extend consciousness itself into the environment. ‘A kind of computerized ESP,’ he called it, envisioning ‘consciousness as the corporate content of the environment—and eventually maybe even a small portable computer, about the size of a hearing aid, that would process our private experience through the corporate experience, the way dreams do now.’”

McLuhan’s accurate prediction of the personal computer and smaller portable devices merits no further explanation but the second insight--consciousness as the new environment-- cuts to the very essence of the present digital era.   Imagine the hearing aid device, anticipated by  McLuhan, as an iPhone or other mobile device. Every individual typing into a Facebook or Twitter application shares private experiences with the wider world, and McLuhan uses the term “corporate group” to indicate the wider world. The posts are exactly as McLuhan described, personal, random thoughts offered in a dreamlike manner. McLuhan perceived the new electronic environment as consciousness— and no better description exists of the modern social network.

The author mentions the plan of industrial giant Westinghouse to place a Time Capsule for future generations at the site of the  World’s Fair. The author suggests Marshall McLuhan might be better utilized as a better Time Capsule than a display of mere physical objects, “cultural and technological mementos of twentieth-century man.” The anonymous writer, in a brilliant feat of understatement,  suggests that McLuhan will teach us more about his era, than any of the lavish futuristic exhibits sponsored by Ford and General Motors. I visited those exhibits and remember the emphasis on automobiles buzzing around the superhighways of the future.  Of course, the ctual superhighway of the future became the Internet.

The 1965 The New Yorker writer notes McLuhan entered the scene as an author, “by three startling books on Western civilization-- The Mechanical Bride, The Gutenberg Galaxy, and most recently Understanding Media, in which he joyfully explores the tribal virtues of popular culture, casts a cynical eye on the ‘classification traditions’ that came in with print and sees near-mythic possibilities in our computer age.”

A year later, at the Texas-Stanford Seminar on “The Meaning of Commercial Television” in April 1966, McLuhan explained further. His audacious comments must have surprised the audience of media professionals and scholars:

1)   The western world organizes itself visually by connective, uniform and continuous space.

2)   Every new medium changes our whole spatial orientation.

3)   We are in the business of reprogramming the sensory life of North America, changing the entire outlook and experience of the population.     
                                                              
                                                                                    (Donner 90-93)

McLuhan’s predictions for deepened audience engagement following the shift from print media to electronic media cannot be overstated as essential to understanding the electronic environment. The inability of individuals to separate from the social network even has an acronym (FOMO) referring to a “fear of missing out.” McLuhan’s notion of new technology working as extensions of the human body had achieved new levels of traction in the electronic era, for if clothing extended the skin, and the wheel extended the legs’ ability to achieve movement, “the computer achieved not merely an extension of our eyes, like print, but an extension of our whole nervous system.”  (New Yorker 1965)




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