- Johann Gutenberg developed the first printing press in Germany in the 1430s using movable metal type.
- The first book printed by Gutenberg was the Bible, and about 180 copies were produced.
- Early printed books looked like handwritten manuscripts and were decorated by hand.
- Printing presses spread rapidly across Europe between 1450 and 1550, increasing book production.
- The shift from hand printing to mechanical printing led to the print revolution.
Definitions [1]
Definition: Despotism
Depositm is A system of governance in which absolute power is exercised by an individual, unregulated by legal and constitutional checks.
Key Points
Key Points: Introduction to Print Culture and Its History
- Printed material is found everywhere in our daily life.
- There was a time when printing technology did not exist.
- Print has a long history that shaped the modern world.
- Printing began in East Asia and later spread to Europe and India.
- Print changed society, culture, and the exchange of ideas.
Key Points: The First Printed Books
- The earliest printing technology was developed in China, Japan, and Korea.
- From AD 594, books in China were printed using hand printing with woodblocks.
- The Chinese imperial state printed many books for civil service examinations.
- By the seventeenth century, print was used by merchants, women, and leisure readers.
- In the nineteenth century, mechanical printing replaced hand printing in China.
Key Points: Print in Japan
- Hand-printing technology was introduced in Japan by Buddhist missionaries from China around AD 768–770.
- The oldest Japanese printed book is the Buddhist Diamond Sutra, printed in AD 868.
- In medieval Japan, books were cheap and widely available, and poets and writers were regularly published.
- The printing of pictures led to illustrated books and artworks that showed urban life and culture.
- Japanese ukiyo prints became famous and influenced artists in Europe and America.
Key Points: Print Comes to Europe
- Silk, spices, and paper from China reached Europe through the Silk Route.
- Marco Polo brought knowledge of woodblock printing from China to Europe in 1295.
- Printed books were cheaper and were mainly used by merchants and students.
- Handwritten manuscripts were slow, costly, and could not meet the growing demand for books.
- Johann Gutenberg invented the printing press in Germany in the 1430s, making printing faster and cheaper.
Key Points: A New Reading Public
- The print revolution changed how people accessed information and knowledge.
- Printing reduced the cost and time of producing books.
- Books became available to a wider public, creating a new reading culture.
- Earlier, reading was limited to elites, while common people depended on oral culture.
- Print and oral cultures mixed as books were read aloud through ballads and folk tales.
Key Points: Religious Debates and the Fear of Print
- Print allowed ideas to circulate widely and encouraged debate and discussion.
- Many people feared that uncontrolled printing would spread rebellious and irreligious ideas.
- Religious authorities and rulers criticised print because it challenged their authority.
- In 1517, Martin Luther used print to criticise the Roman Catholic Church through his Ninety-five Theses.
- Print played a major role in spreading Reformation ideas and creating religious change.
Key Points: Print and Dissent
- Print encouraged people to interpret religious ideas in their own way.
- Even ordinary people, like Menocchio, began questioning church teachings after reading books.
- The Roman Catholic Church punished those whose ideas were seen as heretical.
- To control dissent, the Church imposed strict rules on printing and banned certain books.
- Many thinkers feared that too many books would spread false and dangerous ideas.
Key Points: The Reading Mania
- Literacy increased in Europe during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, leading to a reading mania.
- Schools and churches helped spread education among peasants and artisans.
- Cheap books like almanacs, chapbooks, ballads, and folktales became popular among common people.
- Newspapers and journals spread news about current affairs, trade, and wars.
- Scientific and philosophical ideas reached the public through printed works of thinkers like Newton and Rousseau.
Key Points: Gutenberg and the Printing Press
Key Points: The Power of Print and Enlightenment
- By the mid-eighteenth century, books were seen as tools of progress and enlightenment.
- Many people believed that print could change society and end tyranny.
- Reading was thought to spread reason, knowledge, and intellectual freedom.
- Writers like Louise-Sebastien Mercier highlighted the power of books to transform individuals.
- Print was believed to strengthen public opinion and challenge despotic rulers.
Key Points: Print Culture and the French Revolution
- Print culture helped spread Enlightenment ideas that criticised tradition, superstition, and despotism.
- Thinkers such as Voltaire and Rousseau promoted reason, equality, and rationality through print.
- Print created a public culture of debate where people questioned existing social and political systems.
- By the 1780s, printed literature and cartoons criticised the monarchy and exposed social injustice.
- Print did not directly cause the French Revolution, but it encouraged people to think differently.
Key Points: The Nineteenth Century> Children, Women and Workers
- The nineteenth century saw a major rise in literacy in Europe among children, women, and workers.
- Compulsory education increased the demand for school textbooks and children’s literature.
- Print preserved folk tales but also modified them to suit elite and child readers.
- Women became important readers and writers, and novels helped shape new ideas about women.
- Workers used print for self-education and wrote political writings and autobiographies.
Key Points: Manuscripts Before the Age of Print
- Before print, India had a long tradition of handwritten manuscripts in many languages.
- Manuscripts were written on palm leaves or handmade paper and were often beautifully illustrated.
- Manuscripts were expensive, fragile, and difficult to read, so their use was limited.
- Handwritten manuscripts continued to be produced even after the introduction of print.
- Many students learned to write through dictation without regularly reading written texts.
Key Points: ts: The Nineteenth Century> Further Innovations
- Printing presses were improved with metal and power-driven machines in the nineteenth century.
- Richard M. Hoe developed a fast cylindrical press that printed thousands of sheets per hour.
- New technologies such as offset printing and electric presses increased the speed and colour range of printing.
- Mechanical improvements changed the quality and appearance of printed texts.
- Publishers introduced new selling methods such as serialised novels, cheap series, and paperbacks.
Key Points: Print Comes to India
- The printing press came to India with Portuguese missionaries in the mid-sixteenth century.
- Early printing in India was conducted in Indian languages such as Konkani, Tamil, and Malayalam.
- English printing began in India in 1780 with James Augustus Hickey’s Bengal Gazette.
- The colonial government tried to control the press when it criticised British officials.
- By the end of the eighteenth century, Indians also began publishing newspapers in India.
Key Points: Religious Reform and Public Debates
- In the early nineteenth century, print became an important medium for religious reform and public debate in India.
- Reformers and orthodox groups used printed tracts and newspapers to present and oppose new ideas.
- Religious debates on issues like widow immolation and idol worship were widely discussed through print.
- Reformers like Rammohun Roy used newspapers such as Sambad Kaumudi to spread their views.
- Muslim scholars used print to protect religious beliefs by publishing texts, newspapers, and fatwas.
- Printing religious texts in vernacular languages helped reach both literate and illiterate people.
- Newspapers connected people across regions and helped create a sense of pan-Indian identity.
Key Points: Religious Reform and Public Debates
- In the early nineteenth century, print became an important medium for religious reform and public debate in India.
- Reformers and orthodox groups used printed tracts and newspapers to present and oppose new ideas.
- Religious debates on issues like widow immolation and idol worship were widely discussed through print.
- Reformers such as Rammohun Roy used newspapers such as Sambad Kaumudi to disseminate their views.
- Muslim scholars used print to protect religious beliefs by publishing texts, newspapers, and fatwas.
- Printing religious texts in vernacular languages helped reach both literate and illiterate people.
- Newspapers connected people across regions and helped create a sense of pan-Indian identity.
Key Points: New Forms of Publication
Key Points: Women and Print
- Print increased women’s reading and education in middle-class families during the nineteenth century.
- Many journals supported women’s education and published writings by women.
- Conservative families often opposed women’s education, but some women secretly learned to read and write.
- Women like Rashsundari Debi and Tarabai Shinde wrote about women’s lives and injustices.
- Print culture created interest in women’s emotions, experiences, and personal struggles.
- Women’s journals in the twentieth century discussed social reforms, education, and national issues.
- Cheap printed books and journals made reading accessible to women across different regions of India.
Key Points: Print and the Poor People
- In the nineteenth century, very cheap small books were sold in the markets of towns like Madras for poor people.
- From the early twentieth century, public libraries were set up to increase access to books for the poor.
- In 1871, Jyotiba Phule wrote Gulamgiri, which criticised caste discrimination through print.
- In the twentieth century, leaders like B.R. Ambedkar and E.V. Ramaswamy Naicker (Periyar) used print to spread anti-caste ideas.
- In 1938, Kashibaba, a Kanpur millworker, published Chhote Aur Bade Ka Sawal on caste and class exploitation.
Key Points: Print and Censorship
- Before 1798, the East India Company did not strictly control the press and mainly censored English critics.
- In the 1820s, press regulations were introduced, but in 1835, press freedom was restored by Governor-General Bentinck.
- After the Revolt of 1857, the colonial government imposed strict controls on the Indian press.
- In 1878, the Vernacular Press Act was passed to censor nationalist vernacular newspapers.
- Despite censorship, nationalist newspapers grew, and leaders like Bal Gangadhar Tilak were imprisoned in 1908 for their writings.
Important Questions [10]
- Who among the following said - “Printing is the ultimate gift of God and the greatest one."?
- Examine any three effects of Print culture on the French Revolution.
- In which one of the following institutions in India was a system of reservation for women made by amending the Constitution In 1992?
- Why had Englishmen demanded a clamp down on the 'Vernacular Press' in the 19th century?
- Give Reasons for the Following. the Roman Catholic Church Began Keeping an Index of Prohibited Books from the Mid-sixteenth Century.
- Who among the following brought out 'Bengal Gazette' the first weekly newspaper?
- How did print come in India? Explain with an example.
- Read the given source and answer the questions that follow: WHY NEWSPAPERS? ‘Krishnaji Trimbuck Ranade inhabitant of Poona intends to publish a Newspaper
- Which one of the following aspects was common among the writings of Kailashbashini Debi, Tarabai Shinde and Pandita Ramabai?
- Read the given source and answer the questions that follow: After the Revolt of 1857, the attitude to freedom of the press changed. Enraged Englishmen demanded a clamp down on the 'native' press.
Concepts [17]
- Introduction to Print Culture and the Modern World
- The First Printed Books
- Print Comes to Europe
- Gutenberg and the Printing Press
- The Print Revolution and Its Impact
- A New Reading Public
- Religious Debates and the Fear of Print
- Print and Dissent
- The Reading Mania
- The Nineteenth Century
- India and the World of Print
- Religious Reform and Public Debates
- New Forms of Publication
- Women and Print
- Print and the Poor People
- Print and Censorship
- Overview of Print Culture and the Modern World
