The Method is the Message: Rethinking McLuhan Through Critical
Theory
Paul Grosswiler
Raymond Williams’ (1967, 1974) critique of Marshall McLuhan’s
technological determinism has greatly influenced the way McLuhan has
been received in communication and cultural studies. For instance,
Williams was one of the first to suggest that McLuhan was a
technological determinist because his formalist analysis of the
media was lacking in its ability to account for the workings of
power, political economy, institutional organization, and everyday
life. Williams’ critique was timely in its call for an explicit
discussion of ideology overlooked in the apolitical stance of
modernists like McLuhan. As many recent books about McLuhan argue,
however, in the long term Williams’ orientation has lead to a
disregard for relevant aspects of McLuhan’s media theory.
Recently Paul Grosswiler and Glenn Willmott have contributed to
this long-standing debate. They retrieve McLuhan for their
respective disciplines of critical communication studies and
postmodern literary criticism. McLuhan’s interpretive methods are of
use, they argue, for navigating the shifting terrains of culture,
society, and technology. To counter his dismissal as a formalist and
determinist, Grosswiler and Willmott suggest that McLuhan’s media
theories are intersubjective. Media, therefore, shape the dimensions
of human communication and as such they are communicative,
expressive, and interactive. Media are not merely machine objects
that determine human behavior. McLuhan’s use of dialectical
reasoning, Grosswiler argues, is at the root of his intersubjective
approach. For Willmott, McLuhan is orientated by modernist and
postmodernist theories. Furthermore, both Willmott and Grosswiler
agree, following Arthur Kroker (1984), that McLuhan is a
technological humanist. According to Kroker, McLuhan aimed to
discover the ways in which technology could contribute to human
well-being.
In Method is the Message: Rethinking McLuhan through Critical
Theory, Grosswiler analyzes a wide range of scholarly and
theoretical literature in the fashion of a historical materialist.
He synthesizes McLuhan’s eclectic approach to the media with
seemingly incompatible orientations such as Marxism, critical
theory, and cultural and communication studies. One of McLuhan’s
goals in studying the media, Grosswiler suggests, was to locate
opportunities for human agency in the context of technological
change. Grosswiler reviews an array of approaches to dialectical
reasoning and then historically situates McLuhan. In so doing,
Grosswiler intends to overcome the antagonistic impasse that exists
between Marxists and McLuhanites--each of whom accuse the other of
resorting to instrumental modes of thinking. Grosswiler also
attempts to temper McLuhan’s rejection of dialecticians. McLuhan
associated dialectics with what he understood to be the mechanistic
logics of Platonists, Enlightenment rationalists, and Marxists.
Grosswiler suggests that McLuhan, many Marxists, postmodernists,
critical and postmodern theorists, and cultural studies and critical
communication scholars can be connected through their use of
dialectic reasoning. He compares dialectical reasoning with
qualitative research methods asserting that both formations consider
knowledge to be open-ended and process-oriented rather than
empirical and positivist. In constructing, from a range of seemingly
incompatible positions, a dialectical theory of the media in which
McLuhan is central, Grosswiler aligns himself with Nick Stevenson
(1995), a British social theorist of the media. Stevenson, like
Grosswiler, synthesizes a number of established theoretical
perspectives from communications and cultural studies in order to
create a multiperspectival and hybrid theory to understand how new
media shape the communicative dimensions of the public
sphere.
Grosswiler links McLuhan’s dialectical mode of reasoning to his
thesis of sensory balance and laws of the media. In his sensory
thesis, McLuhan presents a theory of change rooted in the perceptual
bias of dominant media. For instance, McLuhan claimed that
electronic media in its privileging of oral and acoustic perception
created the Global Village, a homogeneous and harmonious social
space. In reviewing disputes surrounding McLuhan’s concept of the
Global Village, Grosswiler notes that because it offers a binaristic
and ahistorical definition of media, this aspect of McLuhan’s
dialectic is limited. To go beyond the dualistic and determinist
limits of the sensory thesis, Grosswiler argues that McLuhan’s laws
of the media are a more flexible form of dialectic and postmodernist
reasoning. The laws of the media chart change in terms of how media
extend, retrieve, negate, and refigure socio-cultural
relationships.
In arguing for the value of McLuhan’s media theories for critical
communications theory, Grosswiler draws on a variety of sources, key
of which is the debate over the state of communications studies
published in the Journal of Communications (summer 1983 and summer
1993). He also refers to complimentary bodies of work emanating from
a special 1989 issue of the Canadian Journal of Communication
devoted to the study of McLuhan, from social theorists of the media
and history of communication scholars, from poststructuralist
theorists, and from political economists. The aim here is to locate
McLuhan’s position within disciplinary debates about the value of
administrative and critical communication research. Given the
parameters of this ongoing discussion Grosswiler relocates McLuhan
within critical communications theory arguing that he employed
expressive modes of reasoning rather than linear forms of
communication. Moreover, McLuhan’s intent was to explore how
communication media shape and reshape culture--in the name of social
change that is humanist and knowledge that is interdisciplinary. He
was unconcerned with administrative research and its goal of
ensuring the efficient operation of organizations.
Whereas Grosswiler’s discussion of McLuhan’s dialectic aims to
construct a multiperspectival method for locating human agency in
the midst of socio-technical change, Willmott argues that McLuhan’s
media theory is idealist and modernist in its attempt to realize
forms of intersubjective communication able to adequately express
the exigencies of the modernity. McLuhan’s idealist approach to
culture, according to Willmott, allows for a definition of media
that is expressive, communicative, and interactive, thereby
exceeding materialist forms rooted in instrumental rationality. In
establishing that media are open systems, relational, and produce
many forms of cultural reason, Willmott affirms that McLuhan was one
of the first to demonstrate the relevance of humanistic and
aesthetic analysis for studying expanded forms of rationality,
media, and culture. However, Willmott adds, McLuhan negotiates the
emergence of postmodernity by using modernist methods to interpret
identities and meanings uprooted from the essentialist foundations
of Enlightenment rationality.
Willmott’s book, McLuhan, or Modernism in Reverse, is organized
according to the modernist-postmodernist trajectory that he ascribes
to the shape of McLuhan’s thinking. In part one, Willmott discusses
McLuhan’s uses of modernism. He begins with a discussion of the
influences of new critics such as I. A. Richards, T. S. Eliot, and
F. R. Leavis; principles of montage borrowed from Sergei Eisenstein,
Wyndham Lewis, and Ezra Pound; as well as the principles drawn from
theorists of society and technology like Lewis Mumford, Siegfried
Giedion, and Harold Innis. In part two, Willmott speculates on
McLuhan’s breach with modernism through his idealization of the
pre-modern past, his performative approach to identity and the
other, and his blurring of the boundaries between high art, popular
culture, corporations, and the mass media. Finally, Willmott
compares McLuhan’s synaesthetic approach to perception, technology,
and experience to existential and phenomenological philosophies of
Martin Heidegger, George Grant, and Canadian literature.
The core of Willmott’s argument about McLuhan’s intersubjective
approach to the media grows out of Fredric Jameson’s theory of
postmodernity. McLuhan’s application of modernist aesthetic methods
to the interpretation of media and culture allows Willmott to link
modernist theories to postmodern cultural phenomena. Moreover,
Jameson’s theory of postmodernity was in part influenced by
McLuhan’s conclusion that electronic media lends cultural form to
the emerging global society. For Jameson, media are the primary
modality organizing the postmodern era. Through the logic of late
capital, the media penetrate all aspects of life thereby completing
the project of modernization, heralding a new society distinctly
separate from the modern. Modernist critical values that privilege
specialization, fixed identity, and transparent language are
inadequate in a multimediated world fostering modes of interrelation
that are pluralistic, performative, contingent, and intersubjective.
Willmott relates Jameson and McLuhan’s use of techne to the
intersubjective approaches of modernists such as the new critic I.
A. Richards and architectural historian Siegfried Giedion. McLuhan,
for example, was influenced by Richard’s study of the formal
elements of poetry designed to discover ethically adequate modes of
communication, understanding, and consciousness. From Giedion,
McLuhan drew on the notion of techne, a concept characterizing the
imposition of human form on material phenomena. Giedion and McLuhan
supposed that techne shaped epistemologically adequate and
historically relevant structures that in turn could constitute
interdisciplinary links between the sciences, arts, and everyday
life.
The value of Grosswiler’s and Willmott’s work is that they
situate McLuhan’s theory of the media within a broad spectrum of
scholarly literature in order to argue that McLuhan’s formal
analysis was intersubjective rather than determinist. Media are
constitutive of the dimensions of human communication, interaction,
and expression. They are not merely pieces of technological hardware
that dictate the outcomes of human behavior. At the same time, both
scholars are concerned with illuminating the importance of McLuhan
in bringing an expanded sense of rationality and aesthetic methods
of interpretation to the study of media and communication. This
allowed for accounts of subjectivity, taste, feeling, and perception
excluded from the dominant theoretical formulations. Willmott
historically locates McLuhan within the humanities as an integral
contributor, not an anomalous instance. For critical communications
studies, Grosswiler constructs a hybrid, working theory of the media
highlighting McLuhan’s contributions. While Grosswiler and Willmott
acknowledge some of the limitations of McLuhan’s media theories,
they often build on these limits by borrowing from other theorists.
For example, to compensate for McLuhan’s inability to account for
social and ideological relationships, Grosswiler draws on the
writing of the Frankfurt School, John Fiske, Raymond Williams, and
Louis Althusser.
While the authors’ focus on McLuhan’s intersubjective approach to
the media attempts to negate dismissals of his work, Willmott and
Grosswiler nevertheless, in some ways, sidestep important questions
about the ideological and institutional positions that McLuhan and
his work occupied. By perhaps more explicitly connecting the ways
that the institutional and ideological relate to the intersubjective
dimensions of McLuhan’s theory, while accounting for how McLuhan’s
work is not only similar to, but differentiated from, those he
borrowed from and is linked to, it would be possible to avoid
perpetuating the limits of McLuhan’s theories. At the same time,
when these considerations are combined with the authors’ thorough
review and synthesis of the literature, future work on McLuhan could
forge beyond the ongoing and oscillating debates that either dismiss
McLuhan for his inability to account for ideology and everyday life,
and those who claim him as a humanist with sophisticated formal
methods of interpretation.
References
Kroker, Arthur. (1984). Technology and the Canadian Mind:
Innis/McLuhan/Grant. Montreal: New World Perspectives.
Stevenson, Nick. (1995). Understanding Media Cultures: Social
Theory and Mass Communication. London: Sage.
Williams, Raymond. (1967). Paradoxically, if the book works it to
some extent annihilates itself. In Gerald E. Stearn (Ed.), McLuhan
hot and cool (pp. 188-191). New York: Dial Press.
Williams, Raymond. (1974). Television: Technology and Cultural
Form. London:
Fontana.
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