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Trykkemaskinens politiske økonomi. Værdien af viden og litteraturens pris i 1830’ernes England
Author(s) -
Thomas Palmelund Johansen
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
passage
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1904-7797
pISSN - 0901-8883
DOI - 10.7146/pas.v29i71.24522
Subject(s) - enlightenment , symbol (formal) , ignorance , ideal (ethics) , politics , object (grammar) , printing press , value (mathematics) , sociology , class (philosophy) , law , media studies , political science , epistemology , philosophy , computer science , artificial intelligence , linguistics , machine learning
Thomas Palmelund Johansen: “The Political Economy of the Printing Press. The Value of Knowledge and the Price of Literature in 1830s Britain”The article explores the use of the printing machine as a symbol and illustration of enlightenment and economizing principles in the cheap periodical literature of Britain in the 1830s. Focussing on two key cheap periodicals from the period it seeks to highlight the central role played by the printing press and steam print in the self-image of the publishers of cheap instructive and wholesome ‘useful’ and scientific literature targeting an upper working-class audience in the attempt to curb the influence of the illegal radical papers. The printing machine as an ideal object provi-ded an illustration of the economic and social structure of civilized society while at the same time symbolizing enlightenment and reason as opposed to ignorance and violence. The use of the material production of print as an instruction in political economy is seen as an attempt to engage with the reader and bring forth a sense of interconnectedness between the social classes based on underlying economic principles of e.g. division of labour.

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