‘Thy love afar is spite at home' Emerson, Thoreau and Carey: an alternative perspective of communication in US
Data(s) |
21/03/2016
21/03/2016
01/04/2015
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Resumo |
The conquest of the West by the stagecoaches and then by railway, Ford and the automobile civilization, the Moon landing by Apollo 11, Microsoft, Apple, CNN, Google and Facebook have appeared to us as celebratory examples of the willingness and ability of the US to overcome the distance and the absence through so-called modern progress of transportation and communication. Undoubtedly, the imaginary and the instrumental power associated to transports and communication of the last century and a half are identified with the mental images that the world has of the US. A world that has eagerly imported and copy their technology and technological culture. Beyond the illusions, this attempting, which has always been praised to transcende space and eclipse the time to get to places and peole increasingly distant and fast, has always a dark side: the political control of population, commercial advertising, the spread of the rumors, noise and gossip. However, since at least the nineteenth century, the political project incorporated in modern transportation and communication technologies was not shared by some of the most remarkable thinkers in the US not only in that century, but also in the 20th century. This paper begins by rescue Ralph W. Emerson and Henry D. Thoreau legacy regarding to communication. Emerson conceived communication as a give-and-take with no coordination between the two, and does not involve contact with the other. Thoreau, in turn, argued that modern trasnportation and communications inventions are but pretty toys which distract attention from serious things, nothing more than 'improved means to an end that is not perfected.' Secondly, we show that this skeptical view of the techological improvement of transport and communication was proceed in an original way with James W. Carey, a media studies thinker who became known for his criticism of the transmission view of communication. |
Identificador |
Subtil, Filipa; Garcia, José Luís - ‘Thy love afar is spite at home' Emerson, Thoreau and Carey: an alternative perspective of communication in US. In International Conference Naturally Emerson: creative reading, self-reliance and cultural agency, Lisbon, University of Lisbon, Faculty of Letters, 16-18 apr 2015 |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Universidade de Lisboa-Faculdade de Letras |
Relação |
https://americanstudiesceaul.wordpress.com/events/ |
Direitos |
restrictedAccess |
Palavras-Chave | #Communication #Communication technologies #Emerson, Ralph Waldo, (1803-1882) #Thoreau, Henry David, (1817-1862) #Carey, James William, (1934-2006) |
Tipo |
conferenceObject |