Paula McDowell

Professor of English, New York University

Paula McDowell is Professor of English at New York University. She is the author of books and essays addressing “media effects” from the eighteenth century to today, including The Women of Grub Street: Press, Politics, and Gender in the London Literary Marketplace, 1678-1730 (Oxford) and The Invention of the Oral: Print Commerce and Fugitive Voices in Eighteenth-Century Britain (Chicago), which won the John Ben Snow Prize of the North American Conference on British Studies. Known for her groundbreaking archival research, her latest project is another archives-based book, titled “McLuhan’s Women.” This will be the first-ever focused study of the women historians, literary scholars, educators, editors, urban planners, anthropologists, family members, nuns, students, staff members, and others who profoundly shaped this influential Canadian philosopher and media theorist’s ideas and works. McDowell also recently edited Reading McLuhan Reading (Routledge).

Participant In:

The Effects of Media

February 24, 2024 at 2:30PM

Past Event

What are the effects of media today? What exactly is “social” about social media? How do media shape reality? Are developments in AI changing media as we understand communications technologies? Sixty years ago, the Canadian Professor of English and Media, Marshall McLuhan published the unexpectedly popular volume Understanding Media (1964), which would go on to… read more »