Changes

From Nordan Symposia
Jump to navigationJump to search
247 bytes added ,  01:22, 13 December 2020
m
Text replacement - "http://" to "https://"
Line 4: Line 4:     
==The impact of literacy on culture==  
 
==The impact of literacy on culture==  
Ong draws on pioneering work by [[Milman Parry]] and [[Marshall McLuhan]], among the first to fully appreciate the significance of the [[word]] as a [[technology]].  McLuhan, in his work ''The Gutenberg Galaxy''<ref>Marshall McLuhan.  ''The [[Gutenberg Galaxy]]:  The Making of Typographic Man'', University of Toronto Press, Toronto, 1962.</ref> shows how each stage in the development of this technology throughout the [[history of communication]] – from the invention of speech (primary orality), to [[pictograms]],  to the [[phonetic alphabet]], to [[typography]], to the electronic communications of today – restructures human consciousness, profoundly changing not only the frontiers of human possibility, but even the frontiers it is possible for humans to imagine.
+
Ong draws on pioneering work by [[Milman Parry]] and [[Marshall McLuhan]], among the first to fully appreciate the significance of the [[word]] as a [[technology]].  McLuhan, in his work ''The Gutenberg Galaxy''<ref>Marshall McLuhan.  ''The [[Gutenberg Galaxy]]:  The Making of Typographic Man'', University of Toronto Press, Toronto, 1962.</ref> shows how each stage in the development of this technology throughout the [[history of communication]] – from the invention of speech (primary orality), to [[pictograms]],  to the [[phonetic alphabet]], to [[typography]], to the electronic communications of today – restructures human consciousness, profoundly changing not only the frontiers of human possibility, but even the frontiers it is possible for humans to imagine.
 +
<center>For lessons on the related [[topic]] of '''''Oral Tradition''''', follow [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Oral_Tradition '''''this link'''''].</center>
    
==Primary orality==
 
==Primary orality==
Line 16: Line 17:     
==Residual orality==
 
==Residual orality==
[[Image:Socrates_Louvre.jpg|thumb|left|"Writing is inhuman." Socrates]]
+
[[Image:Socrates_Louvre.jpg|frame|left|<center>"Writing is inhuman." [[Socrates]]</center>]]
 
‘Residual orality’ refers to thought and its verbal expression in cultures that have been exposed to writing and print, but have not fully ‘interiorized’ (in McLuhan’s term) the use of these technologies in their daily lives.  As a culture interiorizes the technologies of literacy, the ‘oral residue’ diminishes.   
 
‘Residual orality’ refers to thought and its verbal expression in cultures that have been exposed to writing and print, but have not fully ‘interiorized’ (in McLuhan’s term) the use of these technologies in their daily lives.  As a culture interiorizes the technologies of literacy, the ‘oral residue’ diminishes.   
   Line 103: Line 104:  
* Asked to select three similar words from the following list “hammer, saw, log, hatchet”, oral subjects would reject the literate solution (removing the log to produce a list of 3 tools), pointing out that without the log there wasn’t much use for the tools.   
 
* Asked to select three similar words from the following list “hammer, saw, log, hatchet”, oral subjects would reject the literate solution (removing the log to produce a list of 3 tools), pointing out that without the log there wasn’t much use for the tools.   
 
* Oral subjects took a practical, not an abstract, approach to syllogisms.  Luria asked them this question.  ''In the far north, where there is snow, all bears are white.  Novaya Zembla is in the far north and there is always snow there.  What colour are the bears? ''  Typical response:  “I don’t know.  I’ve seen a black bear.  I’ve never seen any others. … Every locality has its own animals.”  
 
* Oral subjects took a practical, not an abstract, approach to syllogisms.  Luria asked them this question.  ''In the far north, where there is snow, all bears are white.  Novaya Zembla is in the far north and there is always snow there.  What colour are the bears? ''  Typical response:  “I don’t know.  I’ve seen a black bear.  I’ve never seen any others. … Every locality has its own animals.”  
* Oral subjects proved unwilling to analyze themselves.  When asked “what sort of person are you?” one responded:  “What can I say about my own heart?  How can I talk about my character?  Ask others; they can tell you about me.  I myself can’t say anything.” Walter J. Ong.  ''Orality and Literacy'', pp. 49-54.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orality]
+
* Oral subjects proved unwilling to analyze themselves.  When asked “what sort of person are you?” one responded:  “What can I say about my own heart?  How can I talk about my character?  Ask others; they can tell you about me.  I myself can’t say anything.” Walter J. Ong.  ''Orality and Literacy'', pp. 49-54.[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orality]
 +
==See Also==
 +
*'''''[[Oral Tradition]]'''''
    
[[Category: General Reference]]
 
[[Category: General Reference]]
 
[[Category: Languages and Literature]]
 
[[Category: Languages and Literature]]

Navigation menu