Du livre à l’information : un tournant historiographique

‌Can the early modern society be understood as the first information society? The worlds of the written word have been considerably transformed historiographically in the last thirty years. This paper proposes a synthesis of the main advances in this field. It focuses mainly on three contemporaneous...

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Main Authors: Jérôme Lamy, Johann Petitjean
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Association Paul Langevin 2021-09-01
Series:Cahiers d’histoire.
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/chrhc/17083
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author Jérôme Lamy
Johann Petitjean
author_facet Jérôme Lamy
Johann Petitjean
author_sort Jérôme Lamy
collection DOAJ
description ‌Can the early modern society be understood as the first information society? The worlds of the written word have been considerably transformed historiographically in the last thirty years. This paper proposes a synthesis of the main advances in this field. It focuses mainly on three contemporaneous aspects, or debates. The first, which is the oldest, concerns the so-called 'revolutionary' dimension of printing, and questions in a new way this material, social and cognitive disruption. The second aspect departs from the classical perspectives on the history of publishing, and aims to show how the history of the printed book, first, and then that of reading, were based on successive paradigm shifts that have contributed to the growth of the interest in 'information'. Recent works on the dissemination of news and the information infrastructures that support these flows confirm the hypothesis of the emergence of a first information society during the early modern age. We will insist in particular on their methods, which invite to decompartmentalize in a profitable way several fields of historical research. The third and last debate concerns the finest scriptural materials, examined from the most discrete markers of thought as well as the process, modern, of progressive diversification of the supports during the period. Their study allows us to better understand the way in which early modern documents were included in the labile structures of a society great consumer of information under its various forms: handwritten or printed books, handwritten or printed newsheets, correspondences, etc.; a society great consumer of documents, and paper.
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institution Kabale University
issn 1271-6669
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spelling doaj-art-e8fc0dc0ea324a1186bf8585df9e4f7c2025-01-30T10:28:43ZfraAssociation Paul LangevinCahiers d’histoire.1271-66692102-59162021-09-0115016919210.4000/chrhc.17083Du livre à l’information : un tournant historiographiqueJérôme LamyJohann Petitjean‌Can the early modern society be understood as the first information society? The worlds of the written word have been considerably transformed historiographically in the last thirty years. This paper proposes a synthesis of the main advances in this field. It focuses mainly on three contemporaneous aspects, or debates. The first, which is the oldest, concerns the so-called 'revolutionary' dimension of printing, and questions in a new way this material, social and cognitive disruption. The second aspect departs from the classical perspectives on the history of publishing, and aims to show how the history of the printed book, first, and then that of reading, were based on successive paradigm shifts that have contributed to the growth of the interest in 'information'. Recent works on the dissemination of news and the information infrastructures that support these flows confirm the hypothesis of the emergence of a first information society during the early modern age. We will insist in particular on their methods, which invite to decompartmentalize in a profitable way several fields of historical research. The third and last debate concerns the finest scriptural materials, examined from the most discrete markers of thought as well as the process, modern, of progressive diversification of the supports during the period. Their study allows us to better understand the way in which early modern documents were included in the labile structures of a society great consumer of information under its various forms: handwritten or printed books, handwritten or printed newsheets, correspondences, etc.; a society great consumer of documents, and paper.https://journals.openedition.org/chrhc/17083writingcommunicationinformationprintnewsmanuscript
spellingShingle Jérôme Lamy
Johann Petitjean
Du livre à l’information : un tournant historiographique
Cahiers d’histoire.
writing
communication
information
print
news
manuscript
title Du livre à l’information : un tournant historiographique
title_full Du livre à l’information : un tournant historiographique
title_fullStr Du livre à l’information : un tournant historiographique
title_full_unstemmed Du livre à l’information : un tournant historiographique
title_short Du livre à l’information : un tournant historiographique
title_sort du livre a l information un tournant historiographique
topic writing
communication
information
print
news
manuscript
url https://journals.openedition.org/chrhc/17083
work_keys_str_mv AT jeromelamy dulivrealinformationuntournanthistoriographique
AT johannpetitjean dulivrealinformationuntournanthistoriographique