FRENCH 224 A: Histories and Futures of the Book, Texts and Reading

Spring 2022
Meeting:
MW 1:00pm - 2:20pm / CDH 109
SLN:
14868
Section Type:
Lecture
Joint Sections:
JSIS A 224 A , TXTDS 224 A , HSTEU 290 B
Instructor:
TAUGHT IN ENGLISH NO PREREQUISITES OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS.
Syllabus Description (from Canvas):

Print, Its Impacts and Futures: Lessons from a Modern Communications Revolution

 

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From medieval manuscripts to commercially printed books to today's rapidly recycled digital content, we'll explore how changing forms have shaped the ways texts have been read and understood, how the development and spread of printing technology in Europe impacted the modern world, how the book became dominant, and how a new media revolution (the mass digitization of texts) is again reshaping access to and understanding of the past.

 

  • We'll study the development and spread of print technology in 15th‑century Europe and the impacts of this communications revolution on life, culture, religion, society and politics: Turnovsky_TXTDS224_Printshop.jpgWhat role did the circulation of printed news play in the fall of monarchies and rise of modern democracies? How did copyright and intellectual property, along with new notions of authorship and originality, emerge from the need to regulate the burgeoning market in printed books? How did “mass-produced” Bibles and devotional books transform religious experience?

 

  • We'll visit UW Libraries Special Collections, where students will study, hands‑on, early printed books form the 16th-18th centuries.

 

  • We'll reflect critically on our present moment, linotype also defined by a revolution in communications technologies, and consider the implications for print of mass digitization and the dominance of the internet. How is the internet transforming reading habits and literacy patterns, which were shaped over centuries by the printed book? What is the future of print?

 

  • Offering a broad history of the modern world through the lens of transformations in media technologies in the past and today, this course will interest students in numerous majors, including in the Humanities, History, Communication, among others. The course will count towards VLPA and I&S distribution requirements.

 

The course counts as an elective in a new minor in Textual Studies and Digital Humanities, just approved this winter.

 

Catalog Description:
From medieval manuscripts to commercially printed books to today's rapidly recycled digital content, explores how changing forms have shaped the ways texts have been read and understood, how the spread of printing technology impacted the modern world, how the book-form became dominant, and how a new media revolution (the mass digitization of texts) is again reshaping access to and understanding of the past. Offered: jointly with JSIS A 224/TXTDS 224.
GE Requirements Met:
Social Sciences (SSc)
Arts and Humanities (A&H)
Credits:
5.0
Status:
Active
Last updated:
May 4, 2024 - 6:58 am