Paper Knowledge: Toward a Media History of Documents (Sign, Storage, Transmission)
Paper Knowledge is a remarkable book about the mundane: the library card, the promissory note, the movie ticket, the PDF (Portable Document Format). It is a media history of the document. Drawing examples from the 1870s, the 1930s, the 1960s, and today, Lisa Gitelman thinks across the media that the document form has come to inhabit over the last 150 years, including letterpress printing, typing and carbon paper, mimeograph, microfilm, offset printing, photocopying, and scanning. Whether examining late nineteenth century commercial, or “job” printing, or the Xerox machine and the role of reproduction in our understanding of the document, Gitelman reveals a keen eye for vernacular uses of technology. She tells nuanced, anecdote-filled stories of the waning of old technologies and the emergence of new. Along the way, she discusses documentary matters such as the relation between twentieth-century technological innovation and the management of paper, and the interdependence of computer programming and documentation. Paper Knowledge is destined to set a new agenda for media studies.
Theatre & the digital
Hemispheric Regionalism
Protocols of Liberty: Communication Innovation & the American Revolution
The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period
Enlightenment
Literature and Encyclopedism in Enlightenment Britain: The Pursuit of Complete Knowledge (Palgrave Studies in the Enlightenment, Romanticism and Cultures of Print)
Poetry and the Idea of Progress, 1760–90
The Ends of Knowledge: Outcomes and Endpoints Across the Arts and Sciences
Writing to the World: Letters and the Origins of Modern Print Genres
Conceptualizing the World: An Exploration across Disciplines (Time and the World: Interdisciplinary Studies in Cultural Transformations Book 4)
Raw Data Is an Oxymoron (Infrastructures)