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Marginal Man: The Dark Vision of Harold Innis

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Marginal Man: The Dark Vision of Harold Innis

Alexander John Watson
University of Toronto Press © 2005

Paper: Mar 8 2007 Active/Available
Cloth: May 10 2006 Active/Available

World Rights
480pp /
Volume


With Marginal Man, Alexander John Watson provides the first in-depth intellectual biography of Harold Adams Innis (1894?1952), the great Canadian economic historian and communications guru. Melding biography and analysis, Watson presents, in unprecedented detail, the links between key events in Innis? life and scholarly influences, and the intellectual synthesis that Innis produced.

Watson illustrates and reconciles the great thinker?s movement from rural Ontario to the centre of Canadian and international scholarship, followed by his relegation to the margin by scholars who did not understand his political project and the essential consistency of his scholarship and vision. Based on exhaustive research including interviews and reviews of archival sources, the book?s methodology reflects that of Innis himself, emphasizing oral tradition and ?dirt? research.

Innis? thought is remarkably relevant to today?s world, and Marginal Man discusses his foresight with regards to technological changes ? such as the arrival of the internet ? as well as historical changes including the end of the Cold War and the beginnings of today?s unipolar world order. This book is an extraordinary work of scholarship in its own right, as well as an essential companion to the work of its subject, one of Canada?s most important minds.

Works by Harold A. Innis

History of the Fur Trade in Canada
The Bias of Communication

Alexander John Watson is a senior fellow at the Munk Centre for International Studies at the University of Toronto.



Endorsements/Review Excerpts

... by giving us Innis in full, Watson's biography delivers the gift of a thinker about the human condition who was also an authentic Canadian prophet. This is surely one of the important books of the year.

-Roy MacSkimming-The Globe and Mail - Friday, February 24, 2006

Awards

Winner: 2008 Donald Grant Creighton Award - Ontario Historical Society



Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction: The Innisian Puzzle

Part One: From the Margin, 1894–1939

  1. The ‘Herald’ of Otterville, 1894–1913
  2. The Great War, 1914–1918
  3. One of the Veterans, 1919–1923
  4. The Search for a New Paradigm, 1920–1929
  5. The Great Betrayal, 1930–1940

Part Two: To the Margin, 1940–1952

  1. Hunting the Snark
  2. A Telegram to Australia: Innis’s Working Methods
  3. Innis and the Classicists: Imperial Balance and Social-Science Objectivity
  4. Time, Space, and the Oral Tradition: Towards a Theory of Consciousness
  5. At the Edge of the Precipice: The Mechanization of the Vernacular and Cultural Collapse
  6. Cassandra’s Curse

Epilogue

Notes

Bibliography

Index



Links

Read Roy MacSkimming's Review: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060224.bkinnis0224/BNStory/SpecialEvents/home





University of Toronto Press acknowledges the financial support for its publishing activities of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP).

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