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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
In the history of modern communication, after the development of the
printing press, the telegraph unleashed a revolution in communications.
Today, Internet is in many ways its heir. Reflections on the telegraph may
open up perspectives concerning tendencies, possibilities and pitfalls of the
Internet.
The telegraph has been well explored in important literature on
communication and media which tends to emphasize the history of this
technology, its social context and institutional meaning [e.g. Robert L.
Thompson, 1947, Tom Standage, 2007 [1998]. James W. Carey, the North-
American critical cultural studies' mentor, in his essay "Technology and
Ideology. The Case of the Telegraph" (2009 [1983]), suggests a distinctive
approach. In the telegraph, Carey sees the prototype of many subsequent
commercial empires based on science and technology, a pioneer model for
complex business management; an example of interest struggle for the
patents control; an inductor of changes both in language and in structures of
knowledge; and a promoter of a futurist and utopian thought of information
technologies.
Having in mind a revolution in communications promoted by the Internet, this
paper revisits this seminal essay to explore its great attainment, as well as
the problems of this kind of approach which conceives the innovation of the
telegraph as a metaphor for all the innovations announcing the modern stage
of history and determining still today the major lines of development in
modern communication systems.
Description
Keywords
Telegraph Communication Carey, James William (1934-2006)
Citation
Garcia, José Luís; Subtil, Filipa - The telegraph as an omen of the future in James W. Carey's vision. In 4th Media History Conference: Perception, Reception. The History of the Media in Society, Wales, Aberystwyth University, 04-06 jul 2012.