Title: INFOGRAPHIC The Nature of Medium
1INFOGRAPHICThe Nature of Medium
- Mind, Media and Society II
- (Applied McLuhanistics)
- Paulina Starzynska
- pstarzynska_at_gazeta.pl
- April 2nd, 2003
2Ways of reading - first tetrad
- ENH
- Interdependencies
- Diverse reading path
- Multiplicity of access points
- Direct access to information needed
- Salience, Interest
- RET
- Leonardo da Vinci
- Galileo
- REV
- Chaos
- Internet
- Noise, diffusion of interest (information
overload) - OBS
- Linear narration
3McLuhans context
- Our visual experience is now a mosaic of items
assembled from every part of the globe, moment by
moment. Lineal perspective and pictorial
organization cannot cope with this situation - Report on Project in Understanding Media, 1960
- Speeding up the components of any visually
ordered structure or continuous space pattern
will lead to breaking its connections and
destroying its boundaries. They explode into the
resonant gaps or interfaces that characterize the
discontinuous structure of acoustic space. - The Argument Causality in Electric World, 1973
4Conclusion I
- Infographic belongs to
- acoustic (or electric) culture
5But is it really something else?
- These news magazines are preeminently mosaic in
form, offering not windows on the world like the
old picture magazines, but presenting corporate
images of society in action. Whereas the
spectator of a picture magazine is passive, the
reader of a new magazine becomes much involved in
the making of meaning for the corporate image. - Understanding Media, 1964
- ...the newspaper in setting up a dozen book pages
on one page was already a big step towards this
sort of cultural simultaneity and non-lineality. - Counterblast, 1969
6But is it really something else?
- Time was perhaps the first magazine to apply the
format of the telegraph press (i.e. the mosaic of
items without connections) to the periodical,
Just a dateline. The Time formula of mosaic in
place of connected editorial features permits the
juxtaposition of esoteric and trivial - the
formula for creating environments, not just a
point of view. - Culture is Our Business, 1970
- Infographic can be seen as the next step in
press mosaic structure
7On the other hand...
- Print enforces a certain kind of logic
one-thing-at-the time, one-thing-leads-directly-to
another logic, if/then, cause/effect the logic
of us internalized - Stephen Mitchell,
- The Rise of the Image, the Fall of the Word, 1998
- The oral is the world of the non-linear, of
all-at-onceness and ESP. There are no lines or
directions in acoustic space, but rather a
simultaneous field. It is non-Euclidean. - Marshall McLuhan, Counterblast, 1969
8Lets probe
- Infographic Informational Graphic
- Info-rational Graphic
9Conclusion II
- Infographic belongs to
- visual culture
- as it stresses its cause-effect logic
10Attitude to reality - second tetrad
- ENH
- Objectivity
- RET
- Science in classical meaning (printed)
- REV
- Multiple subjectivity
- OBS
- Subjectivity
- (authors opinion on the topic)
11Conclusion III
- Infographic belongs to
- visual culture
- as it stresses its fixed point of view
12Content of infographic - third tetrad
- ENH
- (contents condensed to) slogan (in form of
word/text or picture) - RET
- REV
- cliche
- OBS
- sentence
- paragraph
13How it creates a metaphor?
- World in infographic is simplified and
discretized. Objects are purified to notions or
concepts. - Figure key relations between concepts
- Ground
- diversity of objects
- complexity of the world
- infinite relations between objects
14Derrick said...
- They think that our brains are not fast enough.
And of course, that is true, at least in
comparison with digital computers. But our brains
do not need to be fast, it is enough that they be
clever, that is, extremely well-wired and
connected. In reality our natural information
processing capacities are much larger than we
acknowledge. As McLuhan observed, - Information overload leads to
pattern-recognition. - Derrick de Kerckhove, Skin of Culture
15Conclusion IV
- Infographic belongs to
- acoustic (or electric) culture
- as it represents a pattern
- (Mark Federmans comment
- this is not pattern recognition but pattern
imposition)
16What does infographic to usin the context of
culture models?
- McLuhan prompts
- Russia now needs the press (as we formerly did
the book) to translate a tribal and oral
community into some degree of visual, uniform
culture able to sustain a market system. - (Understanding Media, 1964)
- Infographic translates traditional visual logic
into new personalized and easy-to-access-and-nav
igate acoustic structure
17Propaganda - conclusion
- This may be a very effective propaganda as it
lets people think that they construct their
meaning themselves but in fact gives them ready
propaganda message - (Thanks to Gianluca Baccanico for this comment)
18And now... Weather Forecast...
- infographic is composed of simplified and
contextual elements - infographic is composed of images and printed
text - reader has to choose his path of reading himself
- most of readers are not used to read infographic
- effort
- INFOGRAPHIC IS COOL
19McLuhans explanation
- Intensity or high definition engenders specialism
and fragmentation in living as in entertainment,
which explains why any intense experience must be
forgotten, censored, and reduced to a very
cool state before it can be learned or
assimilated. (...) The censor protects our
central system of values, as it does our physical
nervous system by simply cooling off the onset of
experience a great deal. For many people, this
cooling system brings a lifelong state of psychic
rigor mortis, or of somnambulism, particularly
observable in periods of new technology. - (Understanding Media, 1964)
20One week of SeptemberThe Globe and Mail, Sep
13th , 2001
21One week of SeptemberNational Post, Sep 12th ,
2001
- During the week September 12th-18th all
newspapers published number of quarter- to
full-page infographics explaining 9-11 Attack
22Use of infographic in emotionally involving issues
- Infographic is often used to cool down the
audience when topic is very emotionally
involving. - Number of big (e.g. half-page) infographics have
been published not only after 9-11, but also - after Columbia crash
- now, during the war with Iraq
- Press uses combination of infographic and photos
(hot) to manipulate peoples fear of SARS