About

Hi, Andrey Mir is here. I am a media ecologist with 20+ years in journalism and a PhD in comm-cult. Proudly Canadian (Go Leafs go!). This blog is about old and new media and the future of humankind. Find me on Facebook and Substack; Twitter – @Andrey4Mir. To contact me, leave a comment below.

My latest book, The Digital Reversal. Thread-saga of Media Evolution (2025). This book is about the Digital Reversal as the hallmark of the era, and the digital reversals that fuel it. I use the optic of reversal to examine old ideas, like digital orality and the Viral Inquisitor, and to develop new ones, like intellectual escalation and gender reversal. The book explores digital reversals in bundles: the reversals in media, the reversals in values, the epistemological reversals, the sensory-cognitive reversals, the cultural reversals, and the reversal of humankind itself.

To suit both digital orality and digital reversal, the book itself is a reversal—from the long, “monumental” writing of the 20th century to a more digital form: the entire text is written in tweets. Each paragraph does not exceed 280 characters. The book contains 1,295 tweets.

The Viral Inquisitor and other essays on postjournalism and media ecology (2024). The essays in this collection explore various aspects of digital media shift, ranging from the competition between CNN and Fox News, the postjournalism of generative AI, and platforms enslaving users while serving them, to political polarization, the shifting epistemology of truth, and the impacts of screens on children.

Digital Future in the Rearview Mirror. Jaspers’ Axial Age and Logan’s Alphabet Effect (2024), argues that all contemporary disturbances are the outcomes of the reversal of literacy and retrieval of orality – in the form of digital orality. To explore this reversal and retrieval, the book looks back in history at how literacy replaced orality in the past. The idea is that digital media are now replaying this process backward.

Postjournalism and the death of newspapers. The media after Trump: manufacturing anger and polarization (2020), explores the political-economic roots of post-truth and polarization in the news media. Available on Amazon:

Human as media. The emancipation of authorship (2014) introduced the concepts of authorship as a duty and the Viral Editor. It explores the development of online activities into political activism in the early 2010s.

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Background: I worked as an editor in the business press in the 1990-2000s. After leaving the sports in 2010, I specialized in media research and consulting. I am a Fulbright-Kennan scholar (Wilson Center in Washington, DC, 2012-13), a member of the Media Ecology Association and so on and so forth. I hold a PhD in communication and culture, with my thesis centered on applying media ecology and the political economy of communication to the study of the news media. My first dissertation, in journalism and linguistics, focused on the semantics of the Soviet media and propaganda (1996). My books, talks, and publications cover old and new media in the areas of linguistics, history, politics, corporate communication, journalism, and futurology.


Here is a nice review of my writings by William Kuhns in New Explorations: Mir-roring McLuhan in the digital era.

Here are some other reviews of my books and my media appearances:

And finally, here is my photo album with some memorable events and encounters.

16 replies

  1. Hello Sir:

    As a fellow Media Ecologist that knew Eric McLuhan, Mary and Andrew…I love your website and wish I could speak with you one day. I relate to everything on here. Great job. I wish I did a website half as good as this but…I have my reasons. Happy holidays to you and yours.

  2. Re “The Dark Side of the Screen” and ‘There was no other rationale for the light mode.’: Some day you’ll be old enough to understand. Your eyes won’t accommodate to distance anymore. When you look at a bright surface your pupils contract, which makes the image on the retina sharper, so you can actually read the text. Everyone gets it eventually.

Trackbacks

  1. How Russia Is Censoring Reporting On Sochi Olympics Controversies | We Report
  2. How Russia Is Censoring Reporting On Sochi Olympics Controversies | Political Ration
  3. Media Politics in Perspective | How Russia Is Censoring Reporting On Sochi Olympics Controversies
  4. The Launch of the New McLuhan Program, Oct. 20, 2015: A Review by Andrey Mir | McLuhan Galaxy
  5. Philanthropy funding of journalism: a noble corruption – Human as Media
  6. Philanthropy funding of journalism: noble corruption – Human as Media
  7. Postjournalism: Subjective modality in the guise of objective modality – Human as Media
  8. Rage on social media: signaling intensities instead of feelings – Human as Media
  9. The eternal failure of selling news – Human as Media
  10. How both old and new media polarise society for profit (or survival) – Human as Media
  11. The hamsterization of journalism and cannibalism of news teasers – Human as Media
  12. (Almost) Everything You Need to Know About Media
  13. The Mind Map of Media Ecology – Human as Media
  14. Welcome to the Tulpa Simulacra Suck - Vanguardist Journal

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