250 likes | 339 Views
The Beginning of Media. Speech, Symbols, Tokens & Writing. Why study history?. To make the familiar strange To understand the social and technological scaffolding supporting present-day society To identify recurring dynamics
E N D
The Beginning of Media Speech, Symbols, Tokens & Writing
Why study history? • To make the familiar strange • To understand the social and technological scaffolding supporting present-day society • To identify recurring dynamics • To see what makes us human--communication--and how changes in communication change what it means to be human
History as linear progress • Typical history = discrete events as linear progress:oral writing print electronic • But gesture, oral communication, iconic representation, and hand-written script (“old” forms of communication) remain the foundation of much of our social world
History as archeology • Archeological approach: analyze the selective accumulation and sedimentation of technologies • “Technologies” = embodiments of habit which we then inhabit with our bodies (J. MacGregor Wise) • revolving door • inscription of moon phases or seasons • telephone
Questions to ask of history • What media technologies were available in a particular historical context? • How did new media transform the “older” media environment? • Who used the available technologies? What were they used for? Who controlled them? • What forms of knowledge production and distribution did they facilitate? • What forms of social organization did they make possible?
Before writing (~45,000-3,000 B.C.) • Oral communication (performance) • Ritual inscription • Tokens Two key shifts toward abstraction: 1. oral representation inscription 2. iconic representation phonetics
Writing: social implications • inscription communication at a distance • record-keeping sense of history • abstraction reflection, analysis • literacy democratization of knowledgebut also: new literate elite; bureaucratic control • media technology as arena of struggle
Oral communication • sound is evanescent (can’t be stopped) • spoken words = powerful, dynamic events • naming facilitates control • but evanescence limits thought and memory • need for interlocutors, mnemonics, and formulas (e.g., epic, song, ballad)
Oral culture • limited spatial extension • cyclical sense of time • rigid social hierarchy • community, not individuality • stasis, not change
Oral vs. written culture • “Sight isolates, sound incorporates.” (Walter Ong) • “sight situates the observer outside what he views” • “sound pours into the hearer” • Oral culture: unifying, centralizing, interiorizing, aggregative, conservative • Written culture: analytic, dissecting, abstract, dynamic
Early human symbol use celebration, ritual, and magic record-keeping, prediction, and instruction? in any case, expression
Token-based societies hunting/gathering agriculture pooling & redistribution of community resources need for complex organization and control beginnings of tribute and “government” tokens also status symbols (sound familiar?)
Other “ancient” accounting systems Chinese ku-wan (gesture pictures) notched or painted sticks (Native Am) Inca quipu
The transition to writing 1: abstraction symbol of token (mark resembling imprint) trace of token (imprint on clay) physical token (sheep token) physical object (sheep)
The transition to writing, contd. symbol of sound (phoneme) symbol of idea (ideograph) symbol of token or object (pictograph)
Pictographic writing • around 3300 BC: tablets begin to replace tokens in Sumer • eventually gives rise to cuneiform writing, Egyptian hieroglyphics
Ideographic writing (3100-1800 BC) • Babylonians build on Sumerian and Akkadian pictographic writing, combine ideographs with syllabary • develop abstract scientific and philosophical treatises, laws • Chinese still uses ideographic writing
Phonetic writing (1800 BC - present) • Phoenecians revise Sumerian writing, develop symbols for sounds • Phoenecians introduce writing to Greeks (~1000 BC) • Greeks modify phoenecian alphabet, develop dynamic written culture and new levels of philosophical abstraction, artistic literature (~800-300 BC)
The transformation of writing media • stone and chisel • clay and sylus • papyrus and brush • parchment and quill • paper and pen
Writing and social change • “thought gains lightness” (Innis) • oral performance of common values written codes and sacred texts • new status elite: scribes • new spatial extension of control and coordination: agricultural tribute-based civilizations • new sense of time: history “begins”
Writing and social change • writing new forms of control and stratification • but also, democratization of knowledge production, circulation, and storage wider debate, new ideas, political and cultural change (Greek libraries) • later technologies (printing press, telecommunications, electronics) will also have this dual effect
Image credits 1 Tokens and clay envelopeDenise Schmandt-Besserat, “Accounting With Tokens in the Ancient Near East”(http://www.dla.utexas.edu/depts/lrc/numerals/dsb1.html#figure_1). 2 Garment care symbols Rowent, USA (http://www.rowentausa.com/)Ironing example drawn from Andrew Robinson, “The Origins of Writing,” in Communication in History: Technology, Culture, Society, 3rd ed. Edited by David Crowley and Paul Heyer (New York: Addison Wesley Longman, 1999). 3. Marketplace icons Metacrawler (http://www.metacrawler.com) 4. Species timeline Washington State University World Civilizations course (http://www.wsu.edu:8001/vwsu/gened/learn-modules/top_longfor/timeline/timeline.html) 5. Lascaux cave painting Conseil Régional d'Aquitaine, France (http://www.cr-aquitaine.fr/main.asp).