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Marshall McLuhan at 100: Picking through the Rag and Bone Shop of a Career.full name / name of organization: Enculturation: A Journal of Rhetoric, Writing and Cultural Rhetoric contact email: Kevin.Brooks@ndsu.edu and/or dbeard@d.umn.edu Enculturation: A Journal of Rhetoric, Writing and Cultural Rhetoric Special Issue Guest Editors: Marshall McLuhan would have turned 100 on July 21, 2011. His work, ideas, and methods are alive and well in the area of Media Ecology, and some excellent scholarship in the past 10 years has re-assessed his relevance for the 21st century. But McLuhan remains a marginal, sometimes mysterious figure, most notably in his home discipline of English studies; even his place in the history of rhetoric has not been firmly established, despite his career-long commitment to understanding rhetoric. The occasion of his 100th birthday presents a kairotic moment for re-assessing his contributions and continued relevance in all these disciplines, or any field concerned with rhetoric, writing, and culture. The collection, however, is not meant as a hagiography; work critical of McLuhan’s approach, style, or politics is welcome. McLuhan was fond of William Butler Yeats’ image of the “rag-and-bone shop” of history, so this call for papers encourages scholars to “pick through the rag and bone shop” of McLuhan’s career (40 years, 20 books, numerous articles), looking for gems, garbage, or just a trace of something useful for understanding games, language, literature, (new) media, rhetoric, technology, teaching, or writing in the electric, digital age. Work that pays attention to and/or learns from McLuhan’s often overlooked texts (From Cliché to Archetype, Culture is our Business, Through the Vanishing Point, The Laws of Media) would be particularly valuable for expanding McLuhanesque scholarship upon the occasion of his 100th birthday. Genres: Students unfamiliar with McLuhan’s work are encouraged to consider another genre. McLuhan’s works are encrusted by a half-century of secondary commentators. As a result, we sometimes miss the insights that fresh eyes might find. We welcome re/views, readings of McLuhan’s books within the genre of the book review that help us connect his ideas to contemporary problems and concerns. Help us bring the diversity of McLuhan’s works to light. Schedule: Please send correspondence and submissions to Kevin.Brooks@ndsu.edu and/or dbeard@d.umn.edu. cfp categories: bibliography_and_history_of_the_book cultural_studies_and_historical_approaches film_and_television humanities_computing_and_the_internet interdisciplinary journals_and_collections_of_essays modernist studies popular_culture rhetoric_and_composition theory
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