As a continuation to our marathon of McLuhan related posts, one can justifiably ask what what makes Canadian media guru Marshall McLuhan current in this age of the Internet, social media, simulation technologies, virtual realities, and digital culture?
In the information society and contemporary media culture, it should be stressed that McLuhan is an analyst and spokesman of mediatized culture. He understands media and technology as extensions of man (e.g., the wheel is the extention of the foot and the computer an extension of the central nervous system).
In his texts, McLuhan commented on the general media cultural developments and especially the electric and electronic age. Well known and apt is the theorist’s fateful summarization from the year 1964: In the electric age we wear all mankind as our skin.
In McLuhan’s opinion, the content of every new technology and media is technology that has just been passed and cast aside. Therefore, it follows that movies are the content of television, novels are the content of movies, etc.
The media ecological thinking that is a part of “McLuhanism” attempts to identify media environments as the “new nature.” This is illustrated by citations from Essential McLuhan, the book edited by Eric McLuhan and Frank Zingrone (see 1997: 274):
“The new media are not bridges between man and nature; they are nature.” (1969)
“The new media are not ways of relating us to the old ‘real’ world; they are the real world and they reshape what remains of the old world at will.” (1969)
“It is the medium that shapes and controls the scale and form of human association and action.” (1964)
“The reader of the newspaper accepts the newspaper not so much as a highly artificial image having some correspondence to reality as he tends to accept it as reality itself. Perhaps the effect is for the media to substitute for reality just in the degree to which they become virtuosos of realistic detail.” (1978)
“The news automatically becomes the real world for the TV user and is not a substitute for reality, but is itself an immediate reality.” (1978)
It must be emphasized that McLuhan was a technological determinist. The Canadian media theorist and visionary thinks the most important thing is to understand how digital technologies and extensions transform our culture – not so much what specific content is transmitted through the information and media networks.
Instead of semiotic and semantic content analysis, the techno-cultural “meta-level” becomes therefore crucial. This meta-level influences the structures of communities, cultures, and societies.













