Gutenberg's Europe: The Book and the Invention of Western Modernity
Major transformations in society are always accompanied by parallel transformations in systems of social communication – what we call the media. In this book, historian Frédéric Barbier provides an important new economic, political and social analysis of the first great 'media revolution' in the West: Gutenberg s invention of the printing press in the mid fifteenth century. In great detail and with a wealth of historical evidence, Barbier charts the developments in manuscript culture in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and shows how the steadily increasing need for written documents initiated the processes of change which culminated with Gutenberg. The fifteenth century is presented as the 'age of start-ups' when investment and research into technologies that were new at the time, including the printing press, flourished.

Tracing the developments through the sixteenth century, Barbier analyses the principal features of this first media revolution: the growth of technology, the organization of the modern literary sector, the development of surveillance and censorship and the invention of the process of 'mediatization'. He offers a rich variety of examples from cities all over Europe, as well as looking at the evolution of print media in China and Korea.

This insightful re-interpretation of the Gutenberg revolution also looks beyond the specific historical context to draw connections between the advent of print in the Rhine Valley (paper valley) and our own modern digital revolution. It will be of great interest to students and scholars of early modern history, of literature and the media, and will appeal to anyone interested in what remains one of the greatest cultural revolutions of all time.

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Gutenberg's Europe: The Book and the Invention of Western Modernity
Major transformations in society are always accompanied by parallel transformations in systems of social communication – what we call the media. In this book, historian Frédéric Barbier provides an important new economic, political and social analysis of the first great 'media revolution' in the West: Gutenberg s invention of the printing press in the mid fifteenth century. In great detail and with a wealth of historical evidence, Barbier charts the developments in manuscript culture in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and shows how the steadily increasing need for written documents initiated the processes of change which culminated with Gutenberg. The fifteenth century is presented as the 'age of start-ups' when investment and research into technologies that were new at the time, including the printing press, flourished.

Tracing the developments through the sixteenth century, Barbier analyses the principal features of this first media revolution: the growth of technology, the organization of the modern literary sector, the development of surveillance and censorship and the invention of the process of 'mediatization'. He offers a rich variety of examples from cities all over Europe, as well as looking at the evolution of print media in China and Korea.

This insightful re-interpretation of the Gutenberg revolution also looks beyond the specific historical context to draw connections between the advent of print in the Rhine Valley (paper valley) and our own modern digital revolution. It will be of great interest to students and scholars of early modern history, of literature and the media, and will appeal to anyone interested in what remains one of the greatest cultural revolutions of all time.

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Gutenberg's Europe: The Book and the Invention of Western Modernity

Gutenberg's Europe: The Book and the Invention of Western Modernity

by Frédéric Barbier
Gutenberg's Europe: The Book and the Invention of Western Modernity

Gutenberg's Europe: The Book and the Invention of Western Modernity

by Frédéric Barbier

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Overview

Major transformations in society are always accompanied by parallel transformations in systems of social communication – what we call the media. In this book, historian Frédéric Barbier provides an important new economic, political and social analysis of the first great 'media revolution' in the West: Gutenberg s invention of the printing press in the mid fifteenth century. In great detail and with a wealth of historical evidence, Barbier charts the developments in manuscript culture in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and shows how the steadily increasing need for written documents initiated the processes of change which culminated with Gutenberg. The fifteenth century is presented as the 'age of start-ups' when investment and research into technologies that were new at the time, including the printing press, flourished.

Tracing the developments through the sixteenth century, Barbier analyses the principal features of this first media revolution: the growth of technology, the organization of the modern literary sector, the development of surveillance and censorship and the invention of the process of 'mediatization'. He offers a rich variety of examples from cities all over Europe, as well as looking at the evolution of print media in China and Korea.

This insightful re-interpretation of the Gutenberg revolution also looks beyond the specific historical context to draw connections between the advent of print in the Rhine Valley (paper valley) and our own modern digital revolution. It will be of great interest to students and scholars of early modern history, of literature and the media, and will appeal to anyone interested in what remains one of the greatest cultural revolutions of all time.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780745672588
Publisher: Polity Press
Publication date: 12/19/2016
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.80(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Frédéric Barbier is Director of Research at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) and Director of Studies at the École pratique des hautes études, Paris.

Table of Contents

Contents

Foreword

Introduction

Part one Gutenberg before Gutenberg

Chapter 1 The preconditions for a new economy of the media

The key space of modernity: the town

The market in education

The emergence of the political

Chapter 2 The economy of the book

Manuscript production

Change: the objects and practices

Chapter 3 The birth of the market

The market and its regulation

The religious paradigm, or the emergence of the masses

Writing: work and the professions

Part 2 The age of start-ups

Chapter 4 The development and logics of innovation

Paper and papermaking

Xylography

Punches, forms and moulds

Chapter 5 Gutenberg and the invention of printing

Historical portrait of a city

Strasbourg

The return to Mainz

Chapter 6 Innovation

Techniques: innovation in processes

Practices

The society of the workshops

The invention of the graphosphere

Part three The first media revolution

Chapter 7 Printing conquers the world

The spread of the innovation

Ranking the cities

Conjunctures and specializations: the market and innovation

Chapter 8 The nature of text

The book system

The meaning of the text

The 'book-machine'

Chapter 9 The media explosion

A new paradigm: production and reproduction

The Reformation and printing

Regulation: imposing order on books

Printing and governments

Conclusion

Chronologies

Semiology and virtuality

Gutenberg's Europe

Notes

Abbreviations

Index

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