History Class X Chapter 7
History Class X Chapter 7
History Class X Chapter 7
C u Culture
P r i n t Print
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1 The First Printed Books
The imperial state in China was, for a very long time, the major
producer of printed material. China possessed a huge bureaucratic
system which recruited its personnel through civil service
examinations. Textbooks for this examination were printed in vast
numbers under the sponsorship of the imperial state. From the
sixteenth century, the number of examination candidates went up
and that increased the volume of print.
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playing cards and paper money. In medieval Japan, poets and
prose writers were regularly published, and books were cheap
and abundant.
Box 1
Print Culture
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2 Print Comes to Europe
For centuries, silk and spices from China flowed into Europe through
the silk route. In the eleventh century, Chinese paper reached Europe
via the same route. Paper made possible the production of
manuscripts, carefully written by scribes. Then, in 1295, Marco Polo,
a great explorer, returned to Italy after many years of exploration in
China. As you read above, China already had the technology of
woodblock printing. Marco Polo brought this knowledge back with
him. Now Italians began producing books with woodblocks, and
soon the technology spread to other parts of Europe. Luxury New words
editions were still handwritten on very expensive vellum, meant for
Vellum – A parchment made from the skin
aristocratic circles and rich monastic libraries which scoffed at printed
of animals
books as cheap vulgarities. Merchants and students in the university
towns bought the cheaper printed copies.
There was clearly a great need for even quicker and cheaper
reproduction of texts. This could only be with the invention of a
Activity
new print technology. The breakthrough occurred at Strasbourg, Imagine that you are Marco Polo. Write a letter
from China to describe the world of print which
Germany, where Johann Gutenberg developed the first-known
you have seen there.
printing press in the 1430s.
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2.1 Gutenberg and the Printing Press
Gutenberg was the son of a merchant and grew up on a large
agricultural estate. From his childhood he had seen wine and olive
presses. Subsequently, he learnt the art of polishing stones, became a
master goldsmith, and also acquired the expertise to create lead
moulds used for making trinkets. Drawing on this knowledge,
Gutenberg adapted existing technology to design his innovation.
The olive press provided the model for the printing press, and moulds
were used for casting the metal types for the letters of the alphabet.
By 1448, Gutenberg perfected the system. The first book he printed
was the Bible. About 180 copies were printed and it took three Fig. 5 – A Portrait of
Johann Gutenberg,
years to produce them. By the standards of the time this was fast 1584.
production.
The new technology did not entirely displace the existing art of
producing books by hand. Frame
In the hundred years between 1450 and 1550, printing presses were
set up in most countries of Europe. Printers from Germany travelled
to other countries, seeking work and helping start new presses. As Printing block
placed over
the number of printing presses grew, book production boomed. paper
This shift from hand printing to mechanical printing led to the that was placed on top of a sheet of damp
paper. Gutenberg developed metal types for
print revolution. each of the 26 characters of the Roman
alphabet and devised a way of moving them
around so as to compose different words of the
New words text. This came to be known as the moveable
type printing machine, and it remained the basic
Platen – In letterpress printing, platen is a board which is print technology over the next 300 years.
Books could now be produced much faster than
pressed onto the back of the paper to get the impression from was possible when each print block was
the type. At one time it used to be a wooden board; later it prepared by carving a piece of wood by hand.
The Gutenberg press could print 250 sheets
was made of steel on one side per hour.
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Fig. 7 – Pages of Gutenberg’s Bible, the first printed book in Europe.
Gutenberg printed about 180 copies, of which no more than 50 have
survived.
Look at these pages of Gutenberg’s Bible carefully. They were not just
products of new technology. The text was printed in the new Gutenberg
press with metal type, but the borders were carefully designed, painted and
illuminated by hand by artists. No two copies were the same. Every page of
each copy was different. Even when two copies look similar, a careful
comparison will reveal differences. Elites everywhere preferred this lack of
uniformity: what they possessed then could be claimed as unique, for no
one else owned a copy that was exactly the same.
In the text you will notice the use of colour within the letters in various
places. This had two functions: it added colour to the page, and highlighted
all the holy words to emphasise their significance. But the colour on every
page of the text was added by hand. Gutenberg printed the text in black,
leaving spaces where the colour could be filled in later.
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3 The Print Revolution and Its Impact
What was the print revolution? It was not just a development, a new
way of producing books; it transformed the lives of people,
changing their relationship to information and knowledge, and with
institutions and authorities. It influenced popular perceptions and
opened up new ways of looking at things.
Let us explore some of these changes.
even those who did not read could certainly enjoy listening to books
being read out. So printers began publishing popular ballads and
folk tales, and such books would be profusely illustrated with pictures.
These were then sung and recited at gatherings in villages and in New words
taverns in towns. Ballad – A historical account or folk tale in
Oral culture thus entered print and printed material was orally verse, usually sung or recited
transmitted. The line that separated the oral and reading cultures Taverns – Places where people gathered to
became blurred. And the hearing public and reading public became drink alcohol, to be served food, and to meet
intermingled. friends and exchange news
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3.2 Religious Debates and the Fear of Print
Print created the possibility of wide circulation of
ideas, and introduced a new world of debate and
discussion. Even those who disagreed with
established authorities could now print and circulate
their ideas. Through the printed message, they could
persuade people to think differently, and move them
to action. This had significance in different spheres
of life.
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3.3 Print and Dissent New words
Print and popular religious literature stimulated many distinctive
Inquisition – A former Roman Catholic court
individual interpretations of faith even among little-educated working
for identifying and punishing heretics
people. In the sixteenth century, Manocchio, a miller in Italy, began
Heretical – Beliefs which do not follow the
to read books that were available in his locality. He reinterpreted
accepted teachings of the Church. In medieval
the message of the Bible and formulated a view of God and Creation
times, heresy was seen as a threat to the right
that enraged the Roman Catholic Church. When the Roman Church
of the Church to decide on what should be
began its inquisition to repress heretical ideas, Manocchio was
believed and what should not. Heretical beliefs
hauled up twice and ultimately executed. The Roman Church,
were severely punished
troubled by such effects of popular readings and questionings
Satiety – The state of being fulfilled much
of faith, imposed severe controls over publishers and booksellers
beyond the point of satisfaction
and began to maintain an Index of Prohibited Books from 1558.
Seditious – Action, speech or writing that is
seen as opposing the government
Source A
produced.
Discuss
Write briefly why some people feared that the development of
print could lead to the growth of dissenting ideas.
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4 The Reading Mania
The periodical press developed from the early eighteenth century, Box 2
combining information about current affairs with entertainment.
Newspapers and journals carried information about wars and trade, In 1791, a London publisher, James Lackington,
wrote in his diary:
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4.1 ‘Tremble, therefore, tyrants of the world!’
By the mid-eighteenth century, there was a common conviction that Source B
books were a means of spreading progress and enlightenment. Many
believed that books could change the world, liberate society from This is how Mercier describes the impact of the
printed word, and the power of reading in one
despotism and tyranny, and herald a time when reason and intellect
of his books:
would rule. Louise-Sebastien Mercier, a novelist in eighteenth-century
‘Anyone who had seen me reading would have
France, declared: ‘The printing press is the most powerful engine of compared me to a man dying of thirst who was
progress and public opinion is the force that will sweep despotism gulping down some fresh, pure water … Lighting
my lamp with extraordinary caution, I threw
away.’ In many of Mercier’s novels, the heroes are transformed by myself hungrily into the reading. An easy
acts of reading. They devour books, are lost in the world books eloquence, effortless and animated, carried me
create, and become enlightened in the process. Convinced of the from one page to the next without my noticing
it. A clock struck off the hours in the silence of
power of print in bringing enlightenment and destroying the basis the shadows, and I heard nothing. My lamp began
of despotism, Mercier proclaimed: ‘Tremble, therefore, tyrants of to run out of oil and produced only a pale light,
but still I read on. I could not even take out time
the world! Tremble before the virtual writer!’
to raise the wick for fear of interrupting my
pleasure. How those new ideas rushed into my
brain! How my intelligence adopted them!’
4.2 Print Culture and the French Revolution
Many historians have argued that print culture created the conditions Quoted by Robert Darnton, The Forbidden Best-
within which French Revolution occurred. Can we make such Sellers of Pre-Revolutionary France, 1995.
a connection? Source
Three types of arguments have been usually put forward.
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questions about the existing social order. Cartoons and caricatures
typically suggested that the monarchy remained absorbed only in
sensual pleasures while the common people suffered immense
hardships. This literature circulated underground and led to the
growth of hostile sentiments against the monarchy.
Fig. 11 – The nobility and the common people before the French Revolution, a
cartoon of the late eighteenth century.
The cartoon shows how the ordinary people – peasants, artisans and workers – had a
hard time while the nobility enjoyed life and oppressed them. Circulation of cartoons
like this one had an impact on the thinking of people before the revolution.
Discuss
Why do some historians think that print culture created the basis for the French Revolution?
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5 The Nineteenth Century
Box 3
Lending libraries had been in existence from the seventeenth century
onwards. In the nineteenth century, lending libraries in England Thomas Wood, a Yorkshire mechanic, narrated
how he would rent old newspapers and read
became instruments for educating white-collar workers, artisans them by firelight in the evenings as he could not
and lower-middle-class people. Sometimes, self-educated working afford candles. Autobiographies of poor people
narrated their struggles to read against grim
class people wrote for themselves. After the working day was
obstacles: the twentieth-century Russian
gradually shortened from the mid-nineteenth century, workers had revolutionary author Maxim Gorky’s My Childhood
some time for self-improvement and self-expression. They wrote and My University provide glimpses of such
struggles.
political tracts and autobiographies in large numbers.
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5.2 Further Innovations
By the late eighteenth century, the press came to be made out of
metal. Through the nineteenth century, there were a series of further
innovations in printing technology. By the mid-nineteenth century,
Richard M. Hoe of New York had perfected the power-driven
cylindrical press. This was capable of printing 8,000 sheets per hour.
This press was particularly useful for printing newspapers. In the
late nineteenth century, the offset press was developed which could
print up to six colours at a time. From the turn of the twentieth
century, electrically operated presses accelerated printing operations.
A series of other developments followed. Methods of feeding paper
improved, the quality of plates became better, automatic paper reels
and photoelectric controls of the colour register were introduced.
The accumulation of several individual mechanical improvements
transformed the appearance of printed texts.
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6 India and the World of Print
Let us see when printing began in India and how ideas and information
were written before the age of print.
Print Culture
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script was written in different styles. So
manuscripts were not widely used in
everyday life. Even though pre-colonial
Bengal had developed an extensive network
of village primary schools, students very
often did not read texts. They only learnt
to write. Teachers dictated portions of
texts from memory and students wrote Fig. 16 – Pages from the Rigveda.
Handwritten manuscripts continued to be produced in India till much after
them down. Many thus became literate the coming of print. This manuscript was produced in the eighteenth
without ever actually reading any kinds century in the Malayalam script.
of texts.
From 1780, James Augustus Hickey began to edit the Bengal Gazette,
a weekly magazine that described itself as ‘a commercial paper open
to all, but influenced by none’. So it was private English enterprise,
proud of its independence from colonial influence, that began English
printing in India. Hickey published a lot of advertisements, including
India and the Contemporary World
those that related to the import and sale of slaves. But he also Source C
published a lot of gossip about the Company’s senior officials in As late as 1768, a William Bolts affixed a notice
India. Enraged by this, Governor-General Warren Hastings on a public building in Calcutta:
persecuted Hickey, and encouraged the publication of officially ‘To the Public: Mr. Bolts takes this method of
sanctioned newspapers that could counter the flow of information informing the public that the want of a printing
press in this city being of a great disadvantage in
that damaged the image of the colonial government. By the business ... he is going to give the best
close of the eighteenth century, a number of newspapers and encouragement to any ... persons who are
journals appeared in print. There were Indians, too, who began versed in the business of printing.’
to publish Indian newspapers. The first to appear was the weekly Bolts, however, left for England soon after and
nothing came of the promise.
Bengal Gazette, brought out by Gangadhar Bhattacharya, who
was close to Rammohun Roy.
Source
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7 Religious Reform and Public Debates
From the early nineteenth century, as you know, there were intense
debates around religious issues. Different groups confronted the
changes happening within colonial society in different ways, and
offered a variety of new interpretations of the beliefs of different
religions. Some criticised existing practices and campaigned for
reform, while others countered the arguments of reformers. These
debates were carried out in public and in print. Printed tracts and
newspapers not only spread the new ideas, but they shaped the
nature of the debate. A wider public could now participate in these
public discussions and express their views. New ideas emerged
through these clashes of opinions.
In north India, the ulama were deeply anxious about the collapse
of Muslim dynasties. They feared that colonial rulers would
encourage conversion, change the Muslim personal laws. To counter
this, they used cheap lithographic presses, published Persian and
Urdu translations of holy scriptures, and printed religious
newspapers and tracts. The Deoband Seminary, founded in 1867,
published thousands upon thousands of fatwas telling Muslim
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169
the Ramcharitmanas of Tulsidas, a sixteenth-century text, came out
from Calcutta in 1810. By the mid-nineteenth century, cheap
lithographic editions flooded north Indian markets. From the 1880s,
the Naval Kishore Press at Lucknow and the Shri Venkateshwar
Press in Bombay published numerous religious texts in vernaculars.
In their printed and portable form, these could be read easily by the
faithful at any place and time. They could also be read out to large
groups of illiterate men and women.
Source D
Why Newspapers?
‘Krishnaji Trimbuck Ranade inhabitant of Poona intends to publish a Newspaper in the Marathi Language with a view of
affording useful information on every topic of local interest. It will be open for free discussion on subjects of general utility,
scientific investigation and the speculations connected with the antiquities, statistics, curiosities, history and geography of
the country and of the Deccan especially… the patronage and support of all interested in the diffusion of knowledge and
Welfare of the People is earnestly solicited.’
Bombay Telegraph and Courier, 6 January 1849
‘The task of the native newspapers and political associations is identical to the role of the Opposition in the House of
Commons in Parliament in England. That is of critically examining government policy to suggest improvements, by removing
those parts that will not be to the benefit of the people, and also by ensuring speedy implementation.
These associations ought to carefully study the particular issues, gather diverse relevant information on the nation as well
as on what are the possible and desirable improvements, and this will surely earn it considerable influence.’
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8 New Forms of Publication
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8.1 Women and Print
Lives and feelings of women began to be written in particularly
vivid and intense ways. Women’s reading, therefore, increased
enormously in middle-class homes. Liberal husbands and fathers
began educating their womenfolk at home, and sent them to schools
when women’s schools were set up in the cities and towns after the
mid-nineteenth century. Many journals began carrying writings by
women, and explained why women should be educated. They also
carried a syllabus and attached suitable reading matter which could
be used for home-based schooling.
labour and treated unjustly by the very people they served. In the Source E
1880s, in present-day Maharashtra, Tarabai Shinde and Pandita
In 1926, Begum Rokeya Sakhawat Hossein, a
Ramabai wrote with passionate anger about the miserable lives noted educationist and literary figure, strongly
of upper-caste Hindu women, especially widows. A woman in a condemned men for withholding education from
Tamil novel expressed what reading meant to women who were women in the name of religion as she addressed
the Bengal Women’s Education Conference:
so greatly confined by social regulations: ‘For various reasons, my
‘The opponents of female education say that
world is small … More than half my life’s happiness has come women will become unruly … Fie! They call
from books …’ themselves Muslims and yet go against the basic
tenet of Islam which gives Women an equal right
While Urdu, Tamil, Bengali and Marathi print culture had developed to education. If men are not led astray once
early, Hindi printing began seriously only from the 1870s. Soon, a educated, why should women?’
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the early twentieth century, journals, written for and sometimes
edited by women, became extremely popular. They discussed
issues like women’s education, widowhood, widow remarriage
and the national movement. Some of them offered household
and fashion lessons to women and brought entertainment through
short stories and serialised novels.
Fig. 20 – An Indian
couple, black and white
woodcut.
The image shows the
artist’s fear that the
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Fig. 21 – A European couple sitting on chairs,
nineteenth-century woodcut.
The picture suggests traditional family roles. The
Sahib holds a liquor bottle in his hand while the
Memsahib plays the violin.
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9 Print and Censorship
Before 1798, the colonial state under the East India Company was Box 4
not too concerned with censorship. Strangely, its early measures to
control printed matter were directed against Englishmen in India Sometimes, the government found it hard to
who were critical of Company misrule and hated the actions of find candidates for editorship of loyalist papers.
When Sanders, editor of the Statesman that had
particular Company officers. The Company was worried that such
been founded in 1877, was approached, he
criticisms might be used by its critics in England to attack its trade asked rudely how much he would be paid
monopoly in India. for suffering the loss of freedom. The Friend
of India refused a government subsidy, fearing
By the 1820s, the Calcutta Supreme Court passed certain regulations that this would force it to be obedient to
government commands.
to control press freedom and the Company began encouraging
publication of newspapers that would celebrate Britsh rule. In 1835,
faced with urgent petitions by editors of English and vernacular
Box 5
newspapers, Governor-General Bentinck agreed to revise press laws.
Thomas Macaulay, a liberal colonial official, formulated new rules
The power of the printed word is most often
that restored the earlier freedoms. seen in the way governments seek to regulate
and suppress print. The colonial government kept
After the revolt of 1857, the attitude to freedom of the press
continuous track of all books and newspapers
changed. Enraged Englishmen demanded a clamp down on the published in India and passed numerous laws to
‘native’ press. As vernacular newspapers became assertively control the press.
nationalist, the colonial government began debating measures of During the First World War, under the Defence
of India Rules, 22 newspapers had to furnish
stringent control. In 1878, the Vernacular Press Act was passed,
securities. Of these, 18 shut down rather than
modelled on the Irish Press Laws. It provided the government comply with government orders. The Sedition
with extensive rights to censor reports and editorials in the vernacular Committee Report under Rowlatt in 1919 further
strengthened controls that led to imposition of
press. From now on the government kept regular track of the
penalties on various newspapers. At the outbreak
vernacular newspapers published in different provinces. When a of the Second World War, the Defence of India
report was judged as seditious, the newspaper was warned, and if Act was passed, allowing censoring of reports of
war-related topics. All reports about the Quit India
the warning was ignored, the press was liable to be seized and the movement came under its purview. In August
printing machinery confiscated. 1942, about 90 newspapers were suppressed.
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Write in brief
Write in brief
2. Write short notes to show what you know about:
a) The Gutenberg Press
b) Erasmus’s idea of the printed book
c) The Vernacular Press Act
3. What did the spread of print culture in nineteenth century India mean to:
a) Women
b) The poor
c) Reformers
Discuss
Discuss
1. Why did some people in eighteenth century Europe think that print culture would bring
enlightenment and end despotism?
2. Why did some people fear the effect of easily available printed books? Choose one example
from Europe and one from India.
3. What were the effects of the spread of print culture for poor people in nineteenth century India?
India and the Contemporary World
Project
Find out more about the changes in print technology in the last 100 years. Write about the
changes, explaining why they have taken place, what their consequences have been.
Project
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