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Scripts, Grooves, and Writing Machines - Representing Technology in the Edison Era (Paperback)
Loot Price: R988
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Scripts, Grooves, and Writing Machines - Representing Technology in the Edison Era (Paperback)
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This is a richly imaginative study of machines for writing and
reading at the end of the nineteenth century in America. Its aim is
to explore writing and reading as culturally contingent
experiences, and at the same time to broaden our view of the
relationship between technology and textuality.
At the book's heart is the proposition that technologies of
inscription are materialized theories of language. Whether they
failed (like Thomas Edison's "electric pen") or succeeded (like
typewriters), inscriptive technologies of the late nineteenth
century were local, often competitive embodiments of the way people
experienced writing and reading. Such a perspective cuts through
the determinism of recent accounts while arguing for an
interdisciplinary method for considering texts and textual
production.
Starting with the cacophonous promotion of shorthand alphabets in
postbellum America, the author investigates the
assumptions--social, psychic, semiotic--that lie behind varying
inscriptive practices. The "grooves" in the book's title are the
delicate lines recorded and played by phonographs, and readers will
find in these pages a surprising and complex genealogy of the
phonograph, along with new readings of the history of the
typewriter and of the earliest silent films. Modern categories of
authorship, representation, and readerly consumption emerge here
amid the un- or sub-literary interests of patent attorneys,
would-be inventors, and record producers. Modern subjectivities
emerge both in ongoing social constructions of literacy and in the
unruly and seemingly unrelated practices of American spiritualism,
"Coon" songs, and Rube Goldberg-type romanticism.
Just as digital networks and hypertext have today made us more
aware of printed books as knowledge structures, the development and
dissemination of the phonograph and typewriter coincided with a
transformed awareness of oral and inscribed communication. It was
an awareness at once influential in the development of consumer
culture, literary and artistic experiences of modernity, and the
disciplinary definition of the "human" sciences, such as
linguistics, anthropology, and psychology. Recorded sound,
typescripts, silent films, and other inscriptive media are memory
devices, and in today's terms the author offers a critical theory
of ROM and RAM for the century before computers.
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