Media, Consciousness, and Culture: Explorations of Walter Ong's ThoughtBruce E. Gronbeck, Thomas J. Farrell, Paul A. Soukup This book explores relationships among consciousness, orality (and literacy) and culture - an area of study in which the work of Walter Ong is integral. Essays are constructed around notions articulated and argued for by Ong but then extended into new territories by other specialists in the fields he touches. While all of the essays involve the study of media, consciousness and culture, to some degree, voice, a primary medium of communication, receives special attention, as do the effects of writing, print and television in particular circumstances; for example a media ecology of Iran today describes the interplay of primary orality of 'illiterate' people, secondary (electronic) orality, and print. |
Contents
An Overview of Walter J Ongs Work | 25 |
Introduction | 47 |
Print and | 64 |
Copyright | |
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agonistic analysis androgyny anxiety argument audience Bacon century character characterological characterology communication concepts consciousness contemporary Decay of Dialogue dialectic discourse discussion dominant epistemology essay evolution expression feminine feminist figures Fortunata Fortunata y Jacinta frame Freud's gender Gronbeck guilt Havelock Hopkins human identity individual intellectual interiorization Iran Jacinta Kant knowledge language literate literature logic Madame Bovary male manuscript culture masculine McLuhan means medieval method mind modern modes mother movement narrative nature noetic Ong's oral culture orality and literacy orality-literacy Peter of Spain Peter Ramus practice present primary oral psyche Ramism Ramus Ramus's relationship Renaissance rhetoric Riesman Romanticism Saint Louis University scholars secondary oral culture secondary orality sense social society speech stage eight stage seven structures symbolic television textual theory thought tion tradition transformation understanding University Press voice Walter Ong women word writing Zorrilla