Eric McLuhan was the eldest of Marshall McLuhan's six children. He received his BSc in communications from
Wisconsin State University in 1972 and his M.A. and PhD in English Literature from the
University of Dallas in 1980 and 1982. In 2007, he received the Neil Postman Award for Career Achievement in Public Intellectual Activity from the Media Ecology Association. In 2011, the University of St. Michael's College in Toronto, Canada awarded him an L.L.D. of Sacred Letters. Eric McLuhan coined the term "
Media ecology" while teaching at
Fordham University in 1967–68 with his father Marshall McLuhan. According to Eric: "Media Ecology is a term I invented when we were at Fordham. I discussed it with Postman and he ran with it." Marshall and Eric McLuhan co-authored the books
Laws of Media: The New Science (1990),
Media and Formal Cause (2011), and
Theories of Communication (2011). According to McLuhan associate
Dean Motter, Eric also collaborated with his father on some books as a
ghostwriter. His teaching experiences were in the McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology at the
University of Toronto and with the McLuhan Program International. He was Director of Media Studies at the Harris Institute for the Arts in Toronto for 17 years. Prior to that he taught and tutored at
York University,
Dawson College and
Ontario College of Art. Likewise, he was a founding partner at McLuhan and Davies Communications. He also performed the original
Fordham Experiment. McLuhan was the author of
Electric Language (1998),
The Role of Thunder in Finnegans Wake (1997) and
The Sensus Communis, Synesthesia, and the Soul: An Odyssey (2015). He was also editor of the journal
McLuhan Studies and has overseen several collections of his father's work:
The Book of Probes (2011),
Marshall McLuhan Unbound (2005, with Terrence Gordon),
The Medium and the Light (2010); and the co-editor of
Essential McLuhan (1997, with Frank Zingrone). Recent work included a collaboration with mime Wayne D. Constantineau, produced in a series called
The Human Equation (BPS Books), which curiously included a board game. Also forthcoming is:
The Dance of the Ages: Egyptian Art of the Old Kingdom and Its Relevance to the Twenty-First Century, Cambridge Scholars Press. He lived in Ontario, Canada, continuing in retirement to work on new books, projects & collections, his father's works, his own and with collaborators. He died in
Bogotá, a day after delivering the inaugural speech for the Doctorate in Communication at
University of La Sabana. ==List of works==