Ebook: Divine Art, Infernal Machine: The Reception of Printing in the West from First Impressions to the Sense of an Ending
Author: Elizabeth L. Eisenstein
- Tags: Europe, Belgium, France, Germany, Great Britain, Greenland, Italy, Netherlands, Romania, Scandinavia, History, Communication & Media Studies, Social Sciences, Politics & Social Sciences
- Series: Material Texts
- Year: 2011
- Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
- Language: English
- pdf
In Divine Art, Infernal Machine, Eisenstein, author of the hugely influential The Printing Press as an Agent of Change, has written a magisterial and highly readable account of five centuries of ambivalent attitudes toward printing and printers. Once again, she makes a compelling case for the ways in which technological developments and cultural shifts are intimately related. Always keeping an eye on the present, she recalls how, in the nineteenth century, the steam press was seen both as a giant engine of progress and as signaling the end of a golden age. Predictions that the newspaper would supersede the book proved to be false, and Eisenstein is equally skeptical of pronouncements of the supersession of print by the digital.
The use of print has always entailed ambivalence about serving the muses as opposed to profiting from the marketing of commodities. Somewhat newer is the tension between the perceived need to preserve an ever-increasing mass of texts against the very real space and resource constraints of bricks-and-mortar libraries. Whatever the multimedia future may hold, Eisenstein notes, our attitudes toward print will never be monolithic. For now, however, reports of its death are greatly exaggerated.