54 lines
3.5 KiB
Plaintext
54 lines
3.5 KiB
Plaintext
{{Draft|author=MBauwens|date=2026-02-02}}
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The '''Reading Revolution''' refers to the dramatic transformation in the mid-eighteenth century when reading spread rapidly from elite pursuit to mass practice, fundamentally reshaping society and thought.
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== Description ==
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James Marriott describes this transformation:
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<blockquote>
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"No great social transformation has ever been carried out so quietly. This one took place in armchairs, in libraries, in coffee houses and in clubs.
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What happened was this: in the middle of the eighteenth century huge numbers of ordinary people began to read.
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For the first couple of centuries after the invention of the printing press, reading remained largely an elite pursuit. But by the beginning of the 1700s, the expansion of education and an explosion of cheap books began to diffuse reading rapidly down through the middle classes and even into the lower ranks of society. People alive at the time understood that something momentous was going on. Suddenly it seemed that everyone was reading everywhere: men, women, children, the rich, the poor. Reading began to be described as a 'fever', an 'epidemic', a 'craze', a 'madness'. As the historian Tim Blanning writes, 'conservatives were appalled and progressives were delighted, that it was a habit that knew no social boundaries.'"
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</blockquote>
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== Scale of Transformation ==
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<blockquote>
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"In Britain only 6,000 books were published in the first decade of the eighteenth century; in the last decade of the same century the number of new titles was in excess of 56,000. More than half a million new publications appeared in German over the course of the 1700s. The historian Simon Schama has gone so far as to write that 'literacy rates in eighteenth century France were much higher than in the late twentieth century United States'."
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</blockquote>
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== From Intensive to Extensive Reading ==
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<blockquote>
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"Where readers had once read 'intensively', spending their lives reading and re-reading two or three books, the reading revolution popularised a new kind of 'extensive' reading. People read everything they could get their hands on: newspapers, journals, history, philosophy, science, theology and literature. Books, pamphlets and periodicals poured off the presses."
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</blockquote>
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== Impact on Thought ==
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<blockquote>
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"Even more importantly print changed how people thought.
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The world of print is orderly, logical and rational. In books, knowledge is classified, comprehended, connected and put in its place. Books make arguments, propose theses, develop ideas. 'To engage with the written word', the media theorist Neil Postman wrote, 'means to follow a line of thought, which requires considerable powers of classifying, inference-making and reasoning.'
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As Postman pointed out, it is no accident that the growth of print culture in the eighteenth century was associated with the growing prestige of reason, hostility to superstition, the birth of capitalism, and the rapid development of science. Other historians have linked the eighteenth century explosion of literacy to the Enlightenment, the birth of human rights, the arrival of democracy and even the beginnings of the industrial revolution.
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The world as we know it was forged in the reading revolution."
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</blockquote>
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== See Also ==
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* [[Enlightenment]]
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* [[Literacy]]
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* [[Media History]]
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== Source ==
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* [https://jmarriott.substack.com/p/the-dawn-of-the-post-literate-society-aa1 "The Dawn of the Post-Literate Society" by James Marriott]
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[[Category:History]]
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[[Category:Media]]
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[[Category:Culture]]
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[[Category:Education]]
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