Blog Post #3
To apply Innis’s concepts of the bias of communication to media artifacts reflective of Vimy Ridge, one must first overlook the distinctions made between space and time biases. These are notions for understanding how a given culture values time and/or space as shown through communication. A space bias is one which is concerned of space, its expansion, movement and the use of symbols which reinforce these values. It is “communities that were not in place but in space, mobile…” (Carey, 160). A time bias on the other hand demonstrates an interest in history and permanence, while utilizing oral, religious and ritualistic symbols (160). Additionally, community holds a strong foundation through generations and tradition. The Vimy Memorial, as an example, and as depicted through CBC’s video, presents qualities of both space and time bias. Through its physical representation of growth and control in space in one way, and through its historical meaning and the acknowledgement of the event’s “permanence”, or, lasting effects in another. This may help Canadians to know the past in a way that shapes the nation in the present and the future, by encompassing such perspective in biases.
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