Paradigms Lost: The Life and Deaths of the Printed Word
Autor William Sonnen Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 feb 2006
For with each of these changes in the gritty production of glamorous content, expensive and secret bodies of knowledge abruptly became cheap and easy to spread. Once-rare and sometimes disorienting impressions rained down on once-sheltered folks. New and otherwise inexpert hands mixed them into whole new breeds of information, myth, logic, and viewpoints. There were fantastic scientific advances, mass migrations, bold social experiments, financial upheavals, and much bloodshed. In the harrowing decades that followed, powerful new kinds of governments, businesses, and groups came to elbow aside old ones. In all of these periods, there were great, creaking shifts in politics, wealth, religions, and even the way we learn, think, and see. And in the last decade, the costs of producing and distributing printed knowledge have fallen a fifth time, far and fast and almost to free.
Paradigms Lost traces the history of the accidents, inventions, forces, eccentrics, and geniuses who accelerated information in the past, examines what happened each time they succeeded, and provides some background for what, if the past is any guide, may be coming.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780810852624
ISBN-10: 0810852624
Pagini: 393
Dimensiuni: 182 x 227 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Scarecrow Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0810852624
Pagini: 393
Dimensiuni: 182 x 227 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Scarecrow Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Chapter 1 1. Peter Printing Pants in Linotype Hell, 1993
Part 2 Part I. The Birth of Type: From Hand to Lever
Chapter 3 2. Primordial Scratches
Chapter 4 3. The Machine in the Manger
Chapter 5 4. A Certain Scrambling
Chapter 6 5. A Happy Man, Concerned
Chapter 7 6. The Terrible Contagion
Chapter 8 7. Faster Than Asparagus
Part 9 Part II. The Type Age: From Lever to Machine
Chapter 10 8. Cat Troubles
Chapter 11 9. Trickle, Stream, Torrent, Wave...
Chapter 12 10. Extreme Cheapness
Chapter 13 11. The Dam's Last Brick
Chapter 14 12. "The Hasty Approach of Evil"
Chapter 15 13. Complacency's Triumph
Chapter 16 14. The World without Kinship
Part 17 Part III. The End of Type: From Machine to Math
Chapter 18 15. Full Pantry, No Can Opener
Chapter 19 16. War after the War
Chapter 20 17. Dreams of Girl Typists
Chapter 21 18. Buck Rogers Stuff
Chapter 22 19. Like a Burlesque Blonde
Chapter 23 20. Speedups and Slowdowns
Chapter 24 21. Union's End
Chapter 25 22. Aristocrats in Dotage
Part 26 Part IV. Life after Type
Chapter 27 23. Words Out of Dots, Rolled Out of Factories
Chapter 28 24. ...And Offices And...
Chapter 29 25. One Last Transaction Cost
Chapter 30 26. The Descent into Free
Part 31 Bibliography
Part 32 Index
Part 33 About the Author
Part 2 Part I. The Birth of Type: From Hand to Lever
Chapter 3 2. Primordial Scratches
Chapter 4 3. The Machine in the Manger
Chapter 5 4. A Certain Scrambling
Chapter 6 5. A Happy Man, Concerned
Chapter 7 6. The Terrible Contagion
Chapter 8 7. Faster Than Asparagus
Part 9 Part II. The Type Age: From Lever to Machine
Chapter 10 8. Cat Troubles
Chapter 11 9. Trickle, Stream, Torrent, Wave...
Chapter 12 10. Extreme Cheapness
Chapter 13 11. The Dam's Last Brick
Chapter 14 12. "The Hasty Approach of Evil"
Chapter 15 13. Complacency's Triumph
Chapter 16 14. The World without Kinship
Part 17 Part III. The End of Type: From Machine to Math
Chapter 18 15. Full Pantry, No Can Opener
Chapter 19 16. War after the War
Chapter 20 17. Dreams of Girl Typists
Chapter 21 18. Buck Rogers Stuff
Chapter 22 19. Like a Burlesque Blonde
Chapter 23 20. Speedups and Slowdowns
Chapter 24 21. Union's End
Chapter 25 22. Aristocrats in Dotage
Part 26 Part IV. Life after Type
Chapter 27 23. Words Out of Dots, Rolled Out of Factories
Chapter 28 24. ...And Offices And...
Chapter 29 25. One Last Transaction Cost
Chapter 30 26. The Descent into Free
Part 31 Bibliography
Part 32 Index
Part 33 About the Author
Recenzii
...will please anyone who loves history.
Must reading for anyone involved in printing, typesetting or graphic design...a fascinating look at the printed word!
...an energetically written history of print technology that shows how changes in type production have had profound effects on society.
...Sonn's telling of the history of print [is]...engaging.
...amazingly detailed....extremely useful as a research tool.
Colorado-based historian and writer Sonn describes the inventions and forces that shaped information processes in the past, providing a background for what the future may hold. In a conversational yet information-filled narrative he recounts the evolution of the printed word over the past 160,000 years, lightly touching on "primordial scratches" and proceeding to the birth of type (what he describes as "from hand to lever"), the age of type ("from lever to machine"), and the end of type ("from machine to math"), then concluding with "life after type."
William Sonn is at his best...
Sonn is an excellent writer and, judging by the wealth of footnotes and extensive bibliography, a dogged researcher, too.
...a valuable documentary record.
Must reading for anyone involved in printing, typesetting or graphic design...a fascinating look at the printed word!
...an energetically written history of print technology that shows how changes in type production have had profound effects on society.
...Sonn's telling of the history of print [is]...engaging.
...amazingly detailed....extremely useful as a research tool.
Colorado-based historian and writer Sonn describes the inventions and forces that shaped information processes in the past, providing a background for what the future may hold. In a conversational yet information-filled narrative he recounts the evolution of the printed word over the past 160,000 years, lightly touching on "primordial scratches" and proceeding to the birth of type (what he describes as "from hand to lever"), the age of type ("from lever to machine"), and the end of type ("from machine to math"), then concluding with "life after type."
William Sonn is at his best...
Sonn is an excellent writer and, judging by the wealth of footnotes and extensive bibliography, a dogged researcher, too.
...a valuable documentary record.