Sociocultural Systems:
Principles of Structure and Change Macrosociology: Four Modern Theorists A Commentary on Malthus" 1798 Essay as Social Theory Great Classical Social Theorists |
rbert Spencer's Evolutionary
Sociology Elizabeth Eisenstein | |
Elizabeth
Eisenstein’s Printing Press[i] By Frank W.
Elwell While Gerhard
Lenski and Jarred Diamond capture the grand sweep of the social
evolutionary process, historian Elizabeth Eisenstein has focused upon a
single technological innovation and traced its impact on the rest of the
sociocultural system. In elaborate detail, she traces the beginnings of
the communications revolution started by the invention of the printing
press. She successfully demonstrates two principles of
ecological-evolutionary theory:
Modernity,
Eisenstein claims, is too indefinite a concept for careful scholarship.
Rather, she examines the effects of a “communications revolution” on a
variety of social movement in sixteenth century Europe. While many look to
the discovery of the New World, or class struggle and the triumph of
capitalism, or the scientific revolution, or the schism of Christianity to
explain the turmoil and innovation of that century, Eisenstein looks to
the printing press as the primary agent of change. Eisenstein
claims that the impact of the new print technologies on medieval life
beginning in the 1450s was profound. By 1500 she writes that every major city
in Europe had at least one printer’s workshop (43-44). The focus of her
historical analysis is on the effects of these early print shops on the
social structure and culture of Europe over the next 100
years. Many of these
print shops brought together scholars and craftsmen, and served as a
bridge between universities and cities. These workshops were also
capitalist enterprises and training new occupational groups, utilizing new technologies and developing new
techniques; they were constantly seeking new markets to increase their
profits and expanding their enterprises. Eisenstein characterizes the
relationship as one of the shops serving a coordinating function for
scholarly, religious, state, and scientific activities while producing
commodities for profit. As such, these shops represent a new destabilizing
force in Europe, both in their organization and in their
products. As capitalist
enterprises with consequent increases in overhead, and debt the printer
must constantly search for ways to expand his markets in order to increase
his profit. In many of these shops job-printing accompanied book printing
in which printers would produce commercial advertising, official
documents, propaganda for the state and the church, seditious material for
radicals (thin Communist Manifesto) , as well as the necessary documents
for state and private bureaucracies. There were a
variety of motives behind the power of the press in 16th
century Europe—profit, evangelical, individual fame, bureaucratic
necessity, and extending the power of the state all among them. In this
sense, Eisenstein states, the press is not a single technological
innovation that changes everything, but rather an invention that could be
used by the church and state, capitalists and scholars to further their
interests. Early printers were in a unique position in regard to other
commercial enterprises, Eisenstein asserts, because in seeking to expand
their own product line they also “contributed to, and profited from, the
expansion of other commercial enterprises” (60). In a different
culture, she asserts, the technology may have been used for very different
ends, or perhaps entirely suppressed (702-703). Accordingly, institutional
context is important when considering technological innovation. It also
specifically points to the importance of the material interests of elites.
Early printers were effective change agents, but only in combination with
other institutional forces. This function of communications as a catalyst
makes printing different from other innovations. The major
impact of the printing press is, of course, the marked increase in the
number of books that were made available to reading publics. While scribal
errors in writing, mathematics, charts, graphs, and inferior maps
continued to be printed after the advent of the press, a process had begun
to address these errors with more surety, and far greater confidence could
eventually be placed in the accuracy of the record (686, 699). “The fact
that identical images, maps and diagrams could be viewed simultaneously by
scattered readers constituted a kind of communications revolution in
itself” (53). Readers had more sources to draw from and thus a greater
diversity of views, facts, contradictions, observations, theories,
drawings, illustrations, and maps to heighten their “awareness of
anomalies or discontent with inherited schemes” (686).
The long and
uneven spread of literacy after the invention of printing occurs over the
next several centuries (indeed, is still occurring). A knowledge explosion
occurs in the 16th century, and although this explosion is
often attributed to the discovery of the New World, the Reformation, or
the rise of science, Eisenstein believes that access to a greater variety
of books deserves at least equal attention. The increase in texts and
literacy exposed ever greater numbers to classical literature as well as
cross-cultural information, discoveries, religious beliefs, philosophies,
fashion, and ways of thinking in societies geographically remote from
Europe. Such a sudden abundance of literature—often contradictory or novel
to established patterns and though in such traditional societies—created
great intellectual ferment in 16th century Europe. Printed
material, Eisenstein claims, also facilitates problem-solving and directly
affects the life of the mind (689). Along with Marshal McLuhan, Eisenstein
speculates that the format and presentation of books—from scanning lines
of print from left to right, to chapter organization, presentation of
argument, arrangements of facts—may well serve to affect the thought
patterns of readers (88-89). Printing also helped to codify and
standardize languages, thus giving aid to national identities as well as
the centralization of the state. Finally, printing serves the function of
“amplifying and reinforcing” norms, values, beliefs, and ideologies (126).
Printing also
contributed to the fragmentation of Christianity. With the advent of print
religious divisions become more permanent. Heresy, and its condemnation,
she writes, becomes more fixed in the minds of followers; religious edits
more “visible” and “irrevocable” (118-119). The study of scripture became
more individualized and fragmented the religious beliefs and experiences
of Christians, helping to start wars, heresy trials, and intolerance of
other beliefs, a result very different form the effect of printing on
science (701). The advent of
printing also contributed greatly to the spread of individualism in the
West. Because of the dearth of written materials a scribal culture
required communal gatherings to receive messages from government or
church. With the advent of the mass duplication of printed materials these
messages could be given directly to individual readers. This leads to a
weakening of the social bond with local groups, but gives opportunity for
allegiance and attachments to larger collectives (say the nation state or
socialism).
“Printed
materials encouraged silent adherence to causes whose advocates could not
be found in any one parish and who addressed an invisible public from
afar. New forms of group identity began to compete with an older, more
localized nexus of loyalties” (132). Over time printers began to
differentiate the markets for their printed materials to better target the
reading tastes of males and females, newly created occupational groups
(due to an increasing division of labor), as well as different age
groups. The latter,
combined with newly established schools for youth, served to create distinctive youth
cultures for children and, somewhat later, adolescence (133-134). In
general, the marketing of printed materials to specific groups serves to
further differentiate their social experience, beliefs, interests,
ideologies, and values from one another. A process that has been
“amplified and reinforced” as the communications revolution has continued
(158-159). While
Eisenstein’s focus was on the communications revolution that occurred in
sixteenth century Europe, the revolution has continued with the
development of metal presses, the harnessing of steam and then electricity
to the presses, the development of photography, telegraph, telephone,
Linotype, radio, television, computers, and the Internet. “Since the
advent of movable type, an enhanced capacity to store and retrieve,
preserve and transmit has kept pace with an enhanced capacity to create
and destroy, to innovate or outmode. The somewhat chaotic appearance of
modern Western culture owes much, if not more, to the duplicative powers
of print as it does to the harnessing of new powers in the past century”
(704). Macrosociology is steeped in evolutionism; there is much common
ground among its practitioners regarding the material foundations of
sociocultural systems: environment, population, technology, and the
division of labor. Eisenstein’s exploration of the effects of
technological innovation in communications technology on the rest of the
sociocultural system stands as an excellent example of the power and scope
of materialist theory. For a more
extensive discussion of Eisenstein’s Theory read from her books. Also see
Sociocultural
Systems: Principles of Structure and Change to learn how
her insights contribute to a fuller understanding of modern
societies. References: Eisenstein,
Elizabeth. 1980. The Printing Press as an Agent of Change, Vols. 1
& 2. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Elwell, Frank.
2013. Sociocultural Systems: Principles of Structure and Change.
Canada: Athabasca University Press. To
reference Elizabeth Eisenstein's Printing Press you should use the
following format: Elwell,
Frank W. 2013. "Elizabeth Eisenstein's Printing Press,” Retrieved August
31, 2013 [use actual date]
http://www.faculty.rsu.edu/~felwell/Theorists/Essays/Eisenstein1.htm
[i]
An extract from Sociocultural Systems: Principles of Structure and Change.
Alberta: Athabasca University Press.
©2005 Frank Elwell, Send comments to felwell at rsu.edu |