The evolution of the book - Julie Dreyfuss
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Let’s Begin…
What makes a book a book? Is it just anything that stores and communicates information? Or does it have to do with paper, binding, font, ink, its weight in your hands, the smell of the pages? To answer these questions, Julie Dreyfuss goes back to the start of the book as we know it to show how these elements came together to make something more than the sum of their parts.
Additional Resources for you to Explore
The idea of a book as a physical object may prove obsolete. What we are now witnessing is the transformation of active material into archival relics. The digitalization of the book emerges as a product of its culture, but to focus solely on such editions crafts a false tale that loses the humanness associated with the craft. We trade sensory experience for portability and convenience. When we become more used to reading screens, does the reading process change?
If you have an interest in the history of the book and the study of the object itself, then methodology may help to guide your investigation. In 1982, social historian Robert Darnton proposed his “communications circuit” in his article “What is the History of Books?” (found in his The Kiss of Lamourette: Reflections in Cultural History book) Although Darnton ultimately modified this thesis within his “‘What is the History of Books’ Revisited? This is an interesting tool for examining the 'life cycle' of the book.
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Meet The Creators
- Educator Julie Dreyfuss
- Script Editor Addison Anderson, Alex Gendler
- Director Patrick Smith
- Narrator Susan Zimmerman