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The Case For Books: Past, Present, And FutureStock informationGeneral Fields
Special Fields
DescriptionRenowned historian Robert Darnton - a pioneering scholar in the history of the book, and a leading voice in the debate about the digital future of books and knowledge - distils his experience and insight. The era of the book as the unrivalled source and vehicle for knowledge is coming to an end. Digitisation makes the physical properties of books disposable; e-book readers and mobile phones render them portable and accessible almost everywhere. Google and Amazon could command near monopolistic positions as sellers and dispensers of digital information relatively unfiltered by the traditional caucus of book experts: editors, proof-readers, and expert retailers. This is the moment when books could both spring free of the limitations of production processes that have constrained them for 500 years and could also shatter into smithereens, shards of scattered knowledge no longer bound and made meaningful by context, cover and care. Robert Darnton is a unique authority, whose work on this subject for more than a decade has helped invent the discipline of the "History of the Book". Author descriptionRobert Darnton is Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor and director of the Harvard University Library. A Harvard graduate and former Oxford University Rhodes Scholar he worked as a New York Times reporter before joining the History Faculty at Princeton University. Darnton is the author of many books, including The Great Cat Massacre (9780394729275, Vintage) and a regular contribution to publications including the New York Review of Books. |