What consequences of typography did people fear the most? To what extent, in the 15th and 16th Centuries, were these fears justified?
Date Submitted: 11/18/2003 05:29:47
In the early sixth century in Rome there was the practice of keeping a record of the lives of popes in what was known as Liber Pontificalis. "The orthodox collection of these lives was continued well into the Middle Ages and is a standard historical source, whose value for popes, from the late fifth century onwards particularly is well known" (O'Donnell 38). But these writings in Latin Christianity were confined to a well-educated, powerful minority (papacy/
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History of Christianity, Constable & Robinson Ltd. London, England, 2003.
Hobart, M. Information Ages, 1995. Media and Communications: From Papyrus to Print Reader, Adelaide University, 2004.
Jowett, G. Proganda and persuasion, 1986. Media and Communications: From Papyrus to Print Reader, Adelaide University, 2004.
McLuhan, Marshall. The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man. University of Toronto Press, Canada, 1962.
O'Donnell, James J. 'The pragmatics of the new', Geoffrey Nunberg (ed.) The future of the book, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996.
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