| |
 |
History
and Mandate of the McLuhan Program
On
October 24, 1963 the Centre for Culture and Technology
was created to keep Marshall McLuhan at the University
of Toronto. He had received various offers from foreign
universities but John Kelly, president of St. Michael's
College, and Claude T. Bissell, president of the
University of Toronto, together decided to double
McLuhan's salary and establish the Centre for Culture
and Technology for his research. While ambitious plans
were drawn for a concrete and glass structure befitting
a "physical embodiment of the work at the
Centre," funding was nowhere to be found. McLuhan
was undaunted: "We shall concentrate upon achieving
an intellectual identity rather than a physical
one," he maintained. More...
|
|
 |
 |
Association
with the Faculty of Information Studies
The
McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology is a distinct
research and teaching unit within the Faculty
of Information Studies at the University of Toronto.
The Program joined the Faculty of Information Studies in
1994.
The
Program's Association includes access to the McLuhan
Reading Room in the InfoLab at FIS, and
videoconferencing facilities in the Claude T. Bissell
Building. Though a component part of FIS, the McLuhan
Program welcomes graduate students from all disciplines.
More
about institutional support of the Program...
|
|
 |
 |
People
at the McLuhan Program
Executive & Staff | Fellows
The
McLuhan Program ranges from being a lively place, filled
with activity and interaction, to a meditative retreat
in which potentially profound insights are discovered
and shared through the wonders of "communications
at electric speed." With its physical incarnation
deliberately maintained as almost a living museum,
working in the spiritual presence of Marshall McLuhan
inspires many of the people who are associated with the
program. More...
|
|
 |
|
For more
information about how to find us, please visit Visitor
Information.
|
|