ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Writing

A Brief History of the Book - Part I

Author : Sam Vaknin
One of the first acts of the French National Assembly in 1789 was to issue this declaration: "The free communication of thought and opinion is one of the most precious rights of man; every citizen may therefore speak, write and print freely." UNESCO still defines "book" as "non-periodical printed publication of at least 49 pages excluding covers".

Yet, have the innovations of the last five years transformed the concept of "book" irreversibly?

The now defunct BookTailor used to sell its book-customization software mainly to travel agents. Subscribers assembled their own, private edition tome from a library of electronic content. The emerging idiosyncratic anthology was either printed and bound on demand or packaged as an e-book.

Consider what this simple business model does to entrenched and age-old notions such as "original" and "copies", copyright, and book identifiers. Is the "original" the final, user-customized book - or its sources? Should such one-copy print runs be eligible to unique identifiers (for instance, unique ISBN's)? Does the user possess any rights in the final product, compiled by him? Do the copyrights of the original authors still apply?

Members of the BookCrossing.com community register their books in a central database, obtain a BCID (BookCrossing ID Number) and then give the book to someone, or simply leave it lying around to be found. The volume's successive owners provide BookCrossing with their coordinates. This innocuous model subverts the legal concept of ownership and transforms the book from a passive, inert object into a catalyst of human interactions. In other words, it returns the book to its origins: a dialog-provoking time capsule.

Their proponents protest that e-books are not merely an ephemeral rendition of their print predecessors - they are a new medium, an altogether different reading experience.

Consider these options: hyperlinks within the e-book to Web content and reference tools; embedded instant shopping and ordering; divergent, user-interactive, decision driven plotlines; interaction with other e-books using Bluetooth or some other wireless standard; collaborative authoring, gaming and community activities; automatically or periodically updated content; multimedia capabilities; databases of bookmarks, records of reading habits, shopping habits, interaction with other readers, and plot-related decisions; automatic and embedded audio conversion and translation capabilities; full wireless piconetworking and scatternetworking capabilities; and more.

In an essay titled "The Processed Book", Joseph Esposito expounds on five important capabilities of e-books: as portals or front ends to other sources of information, as self-referencing texts, as platforms being "fingered" by other resources, as input processed by machines, and e-books serving as nodes in networks.

E-books, counter their opponents, have changed little beyond format and medium. Audio books are more revolutionary than e-books because they no longer use visual symbols. Consider the scrolling protocols - lateral and vertical. The papyrus, the broadsheet newspaper, and the computer screen are three examples of the vertical kind. The e-book, the microfilm, the vellum, and the print book are instances of the lateral scroll. Nothing new here.

E-books are a throwback to the days of the papyrus. The text is placed on one side of a series of connected "leaves". Parchment, by comparison, was multi-paged, easily browseable, and printed on both sides of the leaf. It led to a revolution in publishing and, ultimately, to the print book. All these advances are now being reversed by the e-book, bemoan the antagonists.

The truth, as always, is somewhere in mid-ground between derision and fawning.

The e-book retains one innovation of the parchment - the hypertext. Early Jewish and Christian texts as well as Roman legal scholarship were inscribed or, later, printed, with numerous inter-textual links. The Talmud, for instance, comprises a main text (the Mishna) surrounded by references to scholarly interpretations (exegesis).

Whether on papyrus, vellum, paper, or PDA - all books are portable. The book is like a perpetuum mobile. It disseminates its content virally, by being circulated, and is not diminished or altered in the process. Though physically eroded, it can be copied faithfully. It is permanent and, subject to faithful replication, immutable.

Admittedly, e-texts are device-dependent (e-book readers or computer drives). They are format-specific. Changes in technology - both in hardware and in software - render many e-books unreadable. And portability is hampered by battery life, lighting conditions, or the availability of appropriate infrastructure (e.g., of electricity).

The printing press technology shattered the content monopoly. In 50 years (1450-1500), the number of books in Europe swelled from a few thousand to more than 9 million. And, as McLuhan noted, it shifted the emphasis from the oral mode of content distribution (i.e., "communication") to the visual mode.

E-books are only the latest application of age-old principles to new "content-containers". Every such transmutation yields a surge in content creation and dissemination. The incunabula - the first printed books - made knowledge accessible (sometimes in the vernacular) to scholars and laymen alike and liberated books from the tyranny of monastic scriptoria and "libraries".

E-books are promising to do the same.

In the foreseeable future, "Book ATMs" placed in remote corners of the Earth would be able to print on demand (POD) any book selected from publishing backlists and front lists comprising millions of titles. Vanity publishers and self-publishing allow authors to overcome editorial barriers to entry and to bring out their work affordably.

The Internet is the ideal e-book distribution channel. It threatens the monopoly of the big publishing houses. Ironically, early publishers rebelled against the knowledge monopoly of the Church. The industry flourished in non-theocratic societies such as the Netherlands and England - and languished where religion reigned (the Islamic world, and Medieval Europe).

With e-books, content is once more a collaborative effort, as it has been well into the Middle Ages. Knowledge, information, and narratives were once generated through the interactions of authors and audience (remember Socrates). Interactive e-books, multimedia, discussion lists, and collective authorship efforts restore this great tradition.

Authors are again the publishers and marketers of their work as they have been well into the 19th century when many books debuted as serialized pamphlets in daily papers or magazines or were sold by subscription. Serialized e-books hark back to these intervallic traditions. E-books may also help restore the balance between best-sellers and midlist authors and between fiction and non-fiction. E-books are best suited to cater to neglected niche markets.

(continued)

About the Author

Sam Vaknin is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He is a columnist for Central Europe Review, United Press International (UPI) and eBookWeb and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory, Suite101 and searcheurope.com.


Visit Sam's Web site at http://samvak.tripod.com

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Direct Sales Reps CAN Write Articles - Here's How!
  2. Speakers and Trainers - The Internet is Your Biggest Megaphone
  3. Creating Your Perfect Article Summary – 7 Tips
  4. Mumblings
  5. Self-Examination
  6. The Writer and the Web
  7. What Nationally Published Columnist, Cindy Laferle Has To Say About Writing & Journalism
  8. Starting a Local Writer's Group
  9. Putting The Critics In Their Place
  10. The article about nothing
  11. Words Matter
  12. Indispensable elements of a powerful law essay
  13. Article Marketing 101: The Perfect Author Resource Box
  14. Getting Looked Over, Without Getting Overlooked: Writing for Scanners and Skimmers
  15. How to Position Yourself to be an Expert
  16. Increasing Web Traffic With Original Articles
  17. Success Starts with Articles
  18. Finding Your Way Through Online Articles
  19. Technical Writing for the Terrified
  20. Got Lingo? The Terminology Of Marketing With Articles
  21. How To Identify Your Own Style Of Writing
  22. How to Use Articles to Generate Free Traffic to Your Website
  23. Writing Helpful Help – A Minimalism Checklist
  24. Power Writing 101: Tips and Tricks to Get You Taken Seriously!
  25. How To Write Thank You Letters With Class
More related feeds
Book Review - Vanishing Portland by Ray and Jeanna Bottenberg
The book starts off with a brief history of Portland spanning the years from the 1840's through around the year 2000. You learn that Portland was very well-known for "shanghai-ing" sailors as forced labor on ocean voyages. ...

Book review - Bears: A Brief History by Bernd Brunner (translated ...
Bears: A Brief History by Bernd Brunner (translated by Lori Lantz) is a wonderfully entertaining book. As the cover suggests, Brunner's book provides a historical account of bears in our culture. For such a compact work, ...

Popular Science has been Replaced by Spiritualism
He was preceded by Hawking’s infamous “A Brief History of Time”, a title surpassed in its absurdity only by Kaku’s own ridiculously titled “Physics of the Impossible: A Scientific Exploration into the World of Phasers, Force Fields, ...

What is the history of Batman, and why does he still appeal?
All-New Deadpool Saga For Free on Marvel Digital Comics Unlimited; DC Universe Online: Jim Lee Interview; Viz Productions; ‘Batman: TAS’, ‘Batman Beyond’ and ‘The Batman’ now online; A brief history of the Joker; Poll: What Do You Think ...

A Brief History of Avant Garde
Brief History of Avant Garde. by Duane King over at thinking for a living. In 1964, Lubalin formed his own design consultation firm named Herb Lubalin, Inc. It was during these years that he collaborated with Ralph Ginzburg on Eros, ...

A brief history of Christian Challenge

Here is the history part of our introduction booklet entitled ‘CCI 101: Discovering Christian Challenge’, that we provided at the luncheon
 History. To understand the history of Christian Challenge you have to know the founders. ...

Yggsburgh - initial thoughts
Part 4 (the appendices) are 64 pages or so, of which 21 are devoted to encounters, mostly urban. If one examines this, you find that barely half the book is actually devoted to the city. In addition, from my brief perusing of the book, ...

these just in 
 22 July, 2008
Divided into sections by decades, this book explores the legendary campaigns and brands of advertising’s modern history, with specific anecdotes and comments on the importance of every campaign. You will find the picture of the camel ...

A Brief History of Firearms Policy Fraud
Noel Perrin’s 1979 book Giving Up The Gun . Perrin argued that Toyotomi Hideyoshi’s 1543 ban on firearms was succeessful and a key factor in the Tokugawa pacification of Japan. Implicitly he propoosed this as a model for emulation. ...

A Brief History of FreebieForce
His methods actually turned into quite an interesting story – and that story became a book known as “The Legal Thief”. Ryan had incredible connections in the Radio industry, having worked as a regular guest and analyst on radio shows ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved