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The Book: The Life Story of a Technology

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One of life's most frequently encountered technologies is perhaps the one most often taken for the printed book. Daily contact with books makes these everyday objects so familiar that one is apt to forget that the invention of the book has more profoundly altered civilization than almost any other invention. This volume provides a broad overview of the printed book's development across many centuries, cultures, and in a variety of fields. It highlights the forerunners and offshoots of books that have come from and been dispersed to all corners of the globe. The creation of a single book requires diverse skills and techniques that have taken centuries to develop. This addition to the Greenwood Technographies series will give readers of all ages a greater appreciation for this familiar phenomenon that is part of everyone's life.

The The Life Story of a Technology provides a concise overview of many of the most compelling and important stories of the history of book
• The history of books, from papyrus scrolls to e-books
• The importance of Gutenberg and his historical context
• The development of book materials, bindings, typefaces, and printing methods
• The book's social and cultural influences, from scientific research and religious beliefs to the structure of government
• Modern technological advances in book printing technology, from linotype and lithography to computer composition and electronic publishing

The volume includes a glossary of terms, a timeline of important events, and a selected bibliography of useful resources for further information.

192 pages, Hardcover

First published September 30, 2005

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About the author

Nicole Howard

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Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for Emma.
41 reviews4 followers
July 27, 2024
In terms of school textbooks, pretty interesting! I wish it went more in depth into the Eastern history, the invention of paper, and an equal focus on block printing, as it's very Gutenberg heavy. But pretty interesting, reads a lot more like a novel than a textbook, and overall a good choice for a history class.
Profile Image for meg (the.hidden.colophon).
572 reviews6 followers
March 20, 2024
I read this for my Book History course in the Spring of '24.

More focused on the technologies surrounding the book rather than the book itself.

Profile Image for Elizabeth.
1,022 reviews
June 7, 2010
I'm not sure quite what I expected from this volume, but it was disappointing. I think I unfairly assume anything that labels itself as a history, is actually a cultural history. This was not a cultural history of books. It was a vastly sweeping technical history of their development from manuscripts copied by hand to e-ink displayed on a virtual page. The attention to the technologies that allowed this evolution to occur was distracting, to say the least. I'm not sure knowing the intricacies of different printing techniques, the controversies over who invented the printing press, or the ways fonts were invented and developed actually has much to do with books themselves. So while I admire Howard's willingness to categorize the book as a technology (especially in a series dedicated to objects whose "technological" status is, perhaps, more obvious), the book's focus on the technologies that surround an enable the book, rather than the book itself, was ultimately disappointing. Of course, it also seems like it's aimed a a undergrad audience. But, I wouldn't assign it to one. There are more compelling books that illuminate book history on a basic level.
Profile Image for Audra.
171 reviews1 follower
July 22, 2014
Was excited by the title since books are one of the most under-appreciated technologies, and was looking for a good textbook for an upcoming class I'm teaching. Sadly, this book focuses quite heavily on the technology of printing instead of book construction, evolution, and manufacture.

Yes, very slim on background history explaining the why of certain revolutions, almost zero critical analysis of this technology's impact, and the last chapter on the future of reading has some laughable thoughts on e-books ("e-paper, assuming it has no negative environmental impacts, is an environmentally sound alternative." - that's a pretty big assumption for a product that inevitably will have parts coming from mines versus a product that can be grown and re-grown).

That said, while this book was originally published in 2005, and while I'm sure there are more updated and thorough histories out there, it's a nice slim intro or overview of the trinity of technologies, books, printing, and writing.
Profile Image for Edwin Battistella.
Author 10 books32 followers
September 27, 2014

I came across THE BOOK while looking for a new text for my History of Publishing course, and after reading it adopted it and revamped the course. Nicole Howard has done an excellent done of telling the story of the book—its origins, economics, labor history and technological development. We learn about papyrus and parchment and paper; the invention of movable type, including the lawsuits between Gutenberg and his business partners (he lost) and the role of the alphabet in printing; the development of books sizes, topics, and print runs; paratext and illustration; book banning and copyright; industrialization and computerization; and the reaction of the labor force to change. As a reader, I wish the book had been longer, but as a teacher it’s just right. Well organized, clearly explained and replete with illustrations, yet with plenty of room for students to find topics for further research.
Profile Image for HeyT.
1,136 reviews
August 14, 2016
This was a brief overview of the book from the perspective of it as a technology. The different ages of the book were broken down and technological processes surrounding the book were discussed. The class I read this focused mainly on the later half of the book which dealt with mechanized printing and the future of it as a technology. Overall it was not as dry as I expected it to be but that may be due to its concise nature.
Profile Image for Kristin.
Author 2 books8 followers
September 6, 2012
Pretty abysmal compared to the other Book History texts I've read - very little critical analysis (besides some railing against unions, which was strange) and lacking some of the important events that effected print culture since the printing press. Elizabeth Eisenstein is a more through and thoughtful writer, who gives the complex history of printing its due, unlike this book.
Profile Image for Chris.
458 reviews
July 26, 2009
I read this for a History of Books and Libraries class. One of those rare occasions when a book that is assigned reading turns out to be fascinating.
Profile Image for Lindsay.
150 reviews16 followers
May 13, 2011
This was assigned to me for my History of the Book class. It was a fine overview of the genre. I skimmed to the end.
Profile Image for Rebekah.
80 reviews
November 1, 2012
Solid, concise history of the book. More of a gateway book than anything else, but a good gateway nonetheless.
1 review
February 19, 2014
It book really helpful to know about history of books and script writings of ancient world.
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

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