Elizabeth L. Eisenstein.
The Printing Press as an Agent of Change: Communications and Cultural Transformations in Early-Modern Europe.
Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1997. xxi + 794 pp.
$54.95 (paper), ISBN 978-0-521-29955-8.
Reviewed by Shannon E. Duffy (Department of History, University of Maryland-College Park)
Published on H-Ideas (June, 2000)
Published on H-Ideas (June, 2000)
The Unacknowledged Revolution
[Note: This review is part of the H-Ideas
Retrospective Reviews series. This series reviews books published
during the twentieth century which have been deemed to be among the most
important contributions to the field of intellectual history.]
Elizabeth Eisenstein's comprehensively-researched
1979 book is a study of the first century of printing, particularly the
period from 1460 to 1480, when printing presses went from rare to
common, and as a consequence changed the way knowledge was preserved and
conveyed. It is primarily a work of synthesis, although Eisenstein
displays a masterful knowledge of the relevant primary materials. Her
goal is to show how intellectual and social reactions to the new print
technology had long-term and frequently unintended consequences, and, as
a result, why this period marked a crucial turning point in western
history.
Eisenstein's thesis is that the capacity of printing
to preserve knowledge and to allow the accumulation of information
fundamentally changed the mentality of early modern readers, with
repercussions that transformed Western society. Ancient and Medieval
scribes had faced tremendous difficulties in preserving the knowledge
that they already possessed, which, despite their best efforts,
inevitably grew more corrupted and fragmented over time. With the
establishment of printing presses, accumulation of knowledge was for the
first time possible. Rather than spending most of their energies
searching for scattered manuscripts and copying them, scholars could now
focus their efforts on revision of these texts and the gathering of new
data. New observations from a widely scattered readership could be
included in subsequent editions. According to Eisenstein, the shift to
printing reversed the whole orientation of attitudes towards learning.
The passage of time no longer inevitably brought with it a lessening of
knowledge. Furthermore, at the new print shops, scholars, artisans and
translators from various nations and religions found themselves working
together, and cooperating in a new, more cosmopolitan environment which
encouraged questioning and individual achievement.
The book has three main sections. In the first
section, Eisenstein explains why print culture represented such a
fundamental break with the past. In the other two sections, she
examines the impact of printing on the Renaissance and its revival of
classical literature, the Protestant Reformation, and the Scientific
Revolution. Eisenstein stresses the interrelated nature of cultural
developments within these three areas of study, which she believes are
too often kept separate by modern historians. She also emphasizes her
belief that historians have underestimated the role of the printing
press, due to their focus on its impact only as it pertained to the
dissemination of "new" ideas.
In the first century of printing, much of the
printers' output was the same inherited texts that scribal work had
produced. But the most important feature was not that the literature was
new, but rather than readers for the first time could see multiple
texts together and compare them. The body of knowledge preserved by
scribes was scattered and incomplete, with authorship of specific texts
obscured, magical incantations intermixed with scientific observations,
and classical literature interspersed with Christian writings. Under
such circumstances, it was possible for manuscript readers to imagine
that the past minds of antiquity had possessed a much more complete
understanding of the world, which had been fragmented and degraded over
time. During the first century of printing, the collection and revision
of this scattered corpus was the primary goal for most scholars. The
assumption, both with regard to biblical writings and to classical
treatises on science, was that each revised work that further sorted out
the jumbled legacy would help make this wisdom clearer. But revised
editions of scripture, which took increasing advantage of the greater
linguistic learning available in printed language dictionaries, revealed
inconsistencies and ambiguities in the texts which could not be easily
resolved. Laying inherited scientific works side by side for the first
time also pointed up discrepancies and contradictions. At the same
time, the new ability to convey maps, charts, and pictures in a uniform
and permanent way meant that older theories in cartography, astronomy,
anatomy, and botany could be checked against new observations.
The use of this new technology produced unexpected
results. How the differing reactions to the changes brought about by
printing shaped subsequent European society is most clearly seen in
Eisenstein's extended discussion of the role print culture played in
shaping religious debates before and after the Protestant Reformation.
There had been many earlier heretical movements within the Catholic
Church before Luther's posting of his 95 theses. But the dissemination
and greater permanence of print culture allowed his challenge to have a
much greater impact. Moreover, the competitive nature of the printing
industry, which was driven by a desire for sales, provided a new, more
public outlet for controversies, and insured that what began as a
scholarly dispute between theologians gained an international audience.
Reformation impulses and the printing industry fed off and accelerated
one another in an age where religious materials were popular sellers.
Differing Catholic and Protestant attitudes towards
print culture resulted in two widely divergent historical paths. In
Protestant lands, approval of vernacular bibles led to encouragement of
greater lay literacy and a closer tying of biblical lore with developing
national cultures. In Eisenstein's view, the differences in Catholic
and Protestant reactions to printing were not due solely to theological
differences, or to Protestants being more enlightened or trusting of
their congregations. Some individual Protestant leaders were hostile to
the changes wrought by printing, particularly the wider dispersal of
controversial books to lay audiences. But areas under Protestant
control were generally less able to implement censorship of the presses
than the more centralized governments of Catholic areas. One of the
most important events in the shaping of early print culture was the
successful rebellion of the Netherlands. In their small, semi-autonomous
provinces, numerous printing presses sprang up that operated relatively
free of censorship, and provided an outlet for authors, even within
areas held by the Counter-Reformation. Books coming off the clandestine
presses proved impossible for the Counter-Reformation to block, with
significant impact for both religion and science.
While the main focus of The Printing Press
is limited to a relatively small group of already-literate elites,
Eisenstein believes that the changes which print culture brought to the
early modern world eventually transformed Western society at large. By
focusing on a fundamental shift in mentality, which came about due to a
basic change in communication and collective memory, and the advent of
uniform duplication, Eisenstein's book anticipates many areas of
interest in recent intellectual history. Her conception of a
cosmopolitan "Republic of Letters" created by the new printing
technology that transcended national borders has been carried on by
historians of the Enlightenment and eighteenth-century thought such as
Dena Goodman.[1] Her emphasis on the need to look at the impact of the
clandestine book trade operating on the periphery of the Catholic
dynasties has also figured prominently in the works of Robert Darnton
and Jack Censor, and in her own more recent work on eighteenth-century
France.[2]
On the other hand, Eisenstein in 1992 expressed
frustration that many of the artificial borders in intellectual history
that she had tried to bridge in The Printing Press still
dominated discussions of European development. Studies of Renaissance
and early European print culture generally remain unrelated to work on
the Enlightenment tradition and eighteenth-century thought.[3]
Furthermore, while she applauded the recent interest in the production
and dissemination of books, including the investigation of printed
materials which were formerly considered too "low-brow" to merit
academic interest, she remained dissatisfied with the continuing split
between the history of ideas and the history of book publication.
According to Eisenstein, recent work on the printing industry, such as
that done by Robert Darnton and Roger Chartier, has greatly expanded
practical knowledge of book production, but these studies generally
treat books chiefly as a commodity, with little reference to the ideas
they contain, or the views held by their propagators.[4]
Eisenstein's approach in The Printing Press
still holds potential as a promising approach to some of the more vexing
questions of European early modern history. While her interpretation
idealizes somewhat the figure of the early printer and his print-shop,
looking at the differing reactions to this new mode of knowledge
dissemination as well as the individuals engaged in this new business
continues to provide a concrete and challenging starting point for
discussing the cultural and intellectual transformations of the early
modern era. As she noted in her conclusion, "[t]o ask historians to
search for elements which entered into the making of an indefinite
'modernity' seems somewhat futile. To consider the effects of a
definite communications shift which entered into each of the movements
under discussion seems more promising. Among other advantages, this
approach offers a chance to uncover relationships which debates over
modernity only serve to conceal" (684).
Notes
[1]. Dena Goodman, The Republic of Letters: A Cultural History of the French Enlightenment (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1994).
[2]. Jack Censor, and Jeremy Popkin, eds., Press and Politics in Pre-Revolutionary France (Berkeley, Calf., 987); Robert Darnton, The Literary Underground of the Old Regime (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1982), and The Forbidden Best-Sellers of Pre-Revolutionary France (New York: W. W. Norton, 1995); Elizabeth Eisenstein, Grub Street Abroad: Aspects of the French Cosmopolitan Press from the Age of Louis XIV to the French Revolution (Oxford and New York: Clarendon Press, 1992).
[3]. Eisenstein, Grub Street Abroad, p. 2.
[4]. ibid., pp. 22-32. Among the works cited by Eisenstein are Robert Darnton, The Business of Enlightenment: A Publishing History of the Encyclopedie 1775-1800 (Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1979), and The Literary Underground of the Old Regime (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1982); and Roger Chartier, The Cultural Uses of Print in Early Modern France, tr. Lydia Cochrane (Princeton, NJ: 1987); and ed., The Culture of Print_, trans. Lydia Cochrane (Princeton, NJ, 1989).
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SUMMARY NOTES
- Print changed the world through new social reactions.
- Before the invention of print medieval and ancient scholars had trouble documenting important information so it changed over years of remembering and passing on information.
- Print brought people of many languages together which encouraged questioning and individual achievement.
- Print changed religion, science, astromony, atonomy, botany and many other practices as information was available to cross check and alter in order to find out the truth.
- This print revolution sent religion down 2 paths Catholic and Protestant who had different views on print. Protestants were less able to implement censorship of the presses than the more centralized governments of Catholic areas.
- One of the most important events for the print movement was the Netherlands Rebellion on Censorship of print. It shaped the print culture and had a significant impact on religion and science.
- Printing press was limited to a fairley small group of people that were already literate elites.
- Eisenstein believes that the changes which print culture brought to the early modern world eventually transformed Western society at large. By focusing on a fundamental shift in mentality, which came about due to a basic change in communication and collective memory, and the advent of uniform duplication
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