剪切/复制/粘贴:书籍历史片段

IF 0.4 Q4 COMMUNICATION
Michael Harris
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这是一部微妙的、引人入胜的、重要的学术著作。在她的多层次文本中,Trettien教授追求许多目标。她关于三个以个人为中心的集体的“图书工作”的核心材料明确关注人文学科出版的未来,以及在这一彻底变革时期,计算机化数据与印刷品和其他媒体形式的关系。她的书的主要书名显示了她的特点。剪切/复制/粘贴是计算机使用中的基本术语,这也可以追溯到她17世纪的三门学科所采用的剪刀和粘贴的写作和出版方法。当他们重新组合旧的文本和其他材料,以多媒体形式创造新的东西时,他们也将当前作为个人收集、重新排序和将电子数据与印刷品整合的当代实践的典范。Little Gidding和她们的“harmo nies”的女性,由圣经版本中的片段组成,John Benlowes,她们的邻居,不断扩展和重塑他自己的印刷书籍,John Bagford为他最终未出版的印刷史收集了大量幸存的书籍和手稿残余,在书名中的三个术语中的一个术语下,每一个术语都清晰可见。Trettien教授把她的研究对象统称为局外人。这在一定程度上源于前两个集团的地理位置,它们位于远离伦敦印刷文化中心的独立隔离区。巴格福德的局外人身份源自其他原因。他作为一名前制鞋商的谦逊社会地位,以及他对标本收集的杂食态度,从未转化为印刷书籍的标准产品,都让他处于图书贸易和精英文化的边缘。随后,她将主人公视为局外人的观点也在其他方面得到了认同。她声称,这在一定程度上是制度保守主义的产物;学者们未能进行分类,未能挑战仍在目录学和文学研究中占主导地位的被粉饰的、父权制的、非规范的历史主义品牌,认为身份问题与现代欧洲早期无关,并通过促进对象、历史、形式和论点来具体地做到这一点,以表明(在这个词的许多意义上)过去的多样性,自由和跨多个平台。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cut/Copy/Paste: Fragments from the History of Bookwork
This is a subtle, absorbing and important work of scholarship. In her multi-layered text, Professor Trettien pursues a number of objectives. Her core material on the ‘ bookwork ’ of three individually centred collectives is explicitly concerned with the future of publishing in the humanities as well as with the relationship of computerised data to print and other media forms during this time of radical change. The character of her book is signalled by its primary title. Cut/Copy/Paste are basic terms in computer use, which can also be referred back to the scissors and paste methodology of writing and publishing adopted by her three seventeenth-century subjects. As they reassembled old texts and other materials to create something new in multi-media forms, they also take on cur-rency as models for contemporary practices in the individual gathering, reordering and integration of electronic data with print. The women of Little Gidding and their ‘ harmo-nies ’ , composed from pieces cut from editions of the bible, John Benlowes, their neigh-bour, continuously extending and reinventing his own printed books, and John Bagford gathering quantities of surviving remnants of books and manuscripts for his fi nally unpub-lished history of print, are brought clearly into view each under one of the three terms in the book ’ s title. Her subjects are collectively described by Professor Trettien as outsiders. This derives in part from the geographical positioning of the fi rst two groupings located in self-contained isolation well away from the centre of print culture in London. Bagford ’ s outsider-ness arose from other causes. Both his modest social status as a former shoe-maker and his omnivorous approach to the collection of specimens, which never trans-ferred into the standard product of the printed book, left him on the fringes of both the book trade and elite culture. The subsequent view of her protagonists as outsiders is also identi fi ed in other ways. It was partly, she claims, a product of institutional conser-vatism; a failure of classi fi cation by scholars and to challenge the whitewashed, patriarchal, heteronormative brand of historicism still dominant in bibliography and literary studies that sees questions of identity as irrelevant to early modern Europe, and to do so speci fi cally by promoting objects, histories, formats, and arguments that evince a diverse (in many senses of that word) past, freely and across multiple platforms.
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来源期刊
Media History
Media History COMMUNICATION-
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
25.00%
发文量
28
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