The Future of the Book
Geoffrey Nunberg, ed.
Twenty Minutes into the Future,
or How Are We Moving Beyond the
Book?
George P. Landow
On Moving Beyond the Book
"In many ways, we have, for better or worse, already moved beyond the
book. Even on the crudest, most materialist standard involving financial
returns, we no longer find it at the center of our culture as the
primary means of recording and disseminating information and
entertainment. The sales of books and other printed matter, for
centuries the center of our technology of cultural memory, now have
fallen to fourth position behind the sales of television, cinema, and
video games. Video games, that child of the digital world, only recently
displaced the book in third place on this list" (209).
On Quality on the Web
"For those of us concerned about moving beyond the book, the truly
interesting fact about this latest intonation of writing technology lies
not in the large among of poorly conceived, egotistical, or simply
boring materials created by all these people with access to a form of
instant publication but, instead, the way so much interesting material
has appeared so quickly and the way new forms of intellectual exchange
come about as a result. Of course the Web often looks crude. But when
one recalls that it took [one] hundred years after the appearance of the
printed book to invent the title page, one realizes it doesn't seem that
bad" (230).
On the Risks of the New Technologies
"Less obvious risks also appear inevitable: since the great strength of
language, after all, lies in its abstractness, its ability economically
to stand in for something else, our notions of education, good writing,
and even intelligence itself relate closely to an ability to formulate
and manipulate such counters. What will happen, then, when children (and
adults) find introducing a three-dimensional video with the sound of,
say, a rhinoceros, into a discussion so easy that they increasingly lose
the ability to formulate abstract or physical descriptions? McLuhan has
persuasively argued that written language had to exist before logical,
causal thinking could become widespread. If so, what will happen when we
increasingly abandon alphanumeric text, if that ever happens, when we
would truly find ourselves beyond the book?" (234).
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