You are on page 1of 34

,.

1 \

Parchment, Printing, and Hypermedia


Communicatioll ill World Order Trallsformation

Ronald J. Deibert

l •
SEP 1 9"999

:~t.
t,~

:1

PROPERTY OF
RYERSON POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY
350 ViCTORIA ST., TORONTO. ONT. M5B 2K3

COL II \t B 1.\ lI:-> I \" E R SIT Y PRE S S :-I E W Y () R K


Columbia Univcrsity Prcss

Publishers Since 1893

New York, Chichester, West Sussex


NE\\' DIRECTIONS IN WORLD POLITICS
Copyright Cl 1997 Cohnnhia Univcrsily Press
'0/111 Gerard HlIggie. Gelleral Editor
All rights reserved

Photo Credits:
John Cerard Ruggie. editor, The Antinomies of Interdependence: National Wel(cl "
Figure 3, page 172. conrtesy of Aeriallmagcs, Inc,

and the Intematiollal Di\'i,~ion of I,,1Imr 19K 3


Figurc 5, pagc 190. courlcsy of Visual Artisls allll Gallcrics AWlcialion, Inc.

Da\id B, Yoffie. POIrer and PmtectiorlislII: Strategies of the New!.1' Illdl/.~triali;:ij ~


COIllltril's JlJS 3
l.ihrary of Congrcss Calaloging-in-Puhlication Data Paul '1;1\ lor. The l,i1llits of European Illtegratir)// IlJlB
Dcihcrt. Ronald J, \\'illial1l I I. Beckcr amI Sal1luel F. \\'ells, Jr., editors, Economics alld World POlI'l
Parchmcnt. prinlin~. amI hypcrmcdia : commnnication in world ordcr lramformalinn ,\11 A~,~e.mne"t of "I1Ieril'lln Dil,/omacy Sillce 17R!) 19K 3
Ronald I. Deibert John Ra\l.'nhill, Co/lel'/;"e Clienteli.ml: The Imile Cr)//I'entirms and North-South Ii
p. cll1 - (Ncw dircctions in world polilics) lations 191);-
lnclndcs bibliographical refcrcnccs and index Rohert Pollard, EcrJIwmic Seellrih' and tire OrigillS of the Cold \\;i" IlJK5

ISBN: 0-231-10712-9Icl: alk. paper) \\'illiam ;\1cJ'\ eil, American ,\lolle)' alld the Weimar Republic 191)6

0-231-107n-7Iphk,) Rohert 0, Keohane, etlilor. Neorca!ism alld Its (;ritic,~ I\)!\()

J, .\nn Tickner. Self·Re/iallce \hsus Power Po/itic,~: The American and Illdian Exp, ~

I. COllnnnnication - Tcchnological inno\'alion< - Hislory

riellces ill Hllilding !':otion States 191)7


2, Civilization - I liston',

Rohert \\', CO'I:. Proelue/irJ/l. Power, and World Order: ~'ocicill'()Tces in tire l\1akinfj , I
'- Comnlllnicalion and cnltmc - Hislory.

His/on' 19K','"
P%.T42 D45 1998 302.2 - 21 97·015336

Jdfrc\' II<lrrod, POll'cr. Prodlle/ir)//, and the [Inproteded \Vorker 19K7


'X:
CII' Da\id R. :'vlares. Pelletrating Intematiollol Markets: Theoretical Considerations </1; :
CaschoulH! cditions of Colnmbia Universi~' Prcss books arc printcd on pcrlllancnt amI \lexicC/lI Agriclll/Ilre 191)7
"mahle acid-frcc paper. John :\, C. C01l\heare. Trade Wars: 'l1le Theor)' and Practice of Intematir!11al CO"
Printcd in Ihe Unitcd Slalcs of Amcrica men'ial Rim/n' 19K7
cl0987654321 Kenneth A Rodman. Sane/it)' \'ersIlS Sovereignt),: U.s, Polic), Toward the Natir!11a:
p 109 8765 4 3 2 I i:::atioll of A'atural Resource Imestmellts in the Third World \988
Constance C. Anthony. 1\lechani:::atioll and Maize: Agriculture and the Politics,
Technology Tran~fer in East Africa 1988
Joe k :\. Finla\"Son and l\ lark \\'. Zacher, II lanaging In tematirJIwl Markets: Developill
COlllltries alld the Comlllodity Trade Regime 1988
Pcler i\l. Ilaas. Sa ring the MediterrallecII/: 'lhe Politics o(1nteTilatir!1101 Envirolllnell/,./
Cooperat irm 1990
Stephen C. Neff, Friellds But No Allies: Economic Liberalism and the Law ofNatirJ/l1
1990
Emanuel Adler and Be\'erh Crawford. Progress ill Poshl'ar International Relations
1991
J. ,~\nn Tickner. Gellder in Illtematiollal Relations: Feminist Perspecti,'es on Achieving
Global Sewrit)' 1992

PROPERTY OF
~,~ RYERSON POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY
350 VIC10RIA 51., TORONTO. ONT. M5B 2K3
john Gerard Ruggie, editor, Multilateralislll Matters: TIre Tlreory and Praxis of an
'IIStitlltion,,1 Fonll 199~
R;my BlIZan, Charles jones, and Richard Little, Tire Logic of Anarel,)': Neorealism
to Strul'lllwl f{eali~'m 199~ Contents
Ronnie n, l.ipsdllltl. and Ken Conca, editors, Tire State and Social POIfer in Global
£nl'irOlllllelltal Politics 1993
J);l\id A. Haldwill, editor, NeorecJ1ism and Neo/iheralism: TI,e Contemporary' Dehate
199~
1(;IlCIl Litfill, O;:one Discollrses: Sciellce cHId l'o/itics ill G/ohal Enrironmental Co·
o/,a"tioll 1994
Ronnie 0, Lipschutz, editor, On Security 1995
PROPERTY OF
Peter j, Kat7enskin, editor, The Cllltllre of NcltiOlwl Secllnt)': Nonlls Cllld 'dentit)· in
RYERSON POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY
350 VICTORIA ST., TORONTO, ONT. M5B 2K3
\\'orld Politics 1966
Edward 0, rvlansfield and Iiden V. l\filner, editors, Tire Political Economy of Ik
giollcJ1ism 1997
Robert Latham, !\fodemi!)', Securil)', alld tire !\faking of Postwar International Order
1997
Preface IX

111troductiol/

I. ~ lediulll Theory, Ecological Holism, and the Study of World


Order Transformation '7

Part 1. Printing and the Medieval to Modern


World Order Transformation

2. From the Parchment Codex to the Printing Press: The Sacred


Word and the Rise and Fall of r-..ledieval Theocracy 47

3· Print and the r-..ledie\·al to r-..lodern World Order Transformation:


Distribntional Changes 67

4­ Print and the r-..Icdievalto Modern World Order Transformation:


Changes to Social Epistemology 94

Part 2. Hypermedia and the Modern to


Postmodern World Order Transformation

). Transformation in the r-..lode of Communication: The Emergence


of the H~'pennedia Environment 113
viII CONIENIS

6'lI-!iR~rmediaand the Modern to Postmodern World Order

~formation: Distributional Changes 137

Hyp'tmnedia and the Modern to Postmodern World Ordcr


PI
,V"I> <
Preface
,'t~~sformation: Changes to Social EpistenlOlogr 177
.8/ Conclusion 202

~otes 219

Bibliography 285

Index 315

The main contcntion of this hook is that the landscape (


world politics is undergoing rapid and fundamental transformations relate
to the alkcnt of digital-electronic tclcconnnunications _ what I call the h,
permedia em'iromnent - and that the most useful way to fathom thcse tran
formations is through the lens of "medium theory." Admittcdly, the picllll
that emcrges through this JCIlS \\'ill bc discomforting to m<1ny: postmodcl
world order is a placc inhabited br de-tcrritorialized COnlllJIIllities, fral'
mCllted idcntitics, transllatiollal corporations, and cybcrspalial Aows of [I
1I:1I1ce, It is a world in which brokers, cnlli,st.s, amI klwlif, arc as IIInch i!
promincnt relicf as CilnadiallS, Poles, and Kuwaitis, It is, paradoxically, .
world made up of plmal worlds, multiple realities and irrealities _ digita
artifacts stitched together in a web of spectacles, cineplexes, alld Scgas. No
a single "global \'illage," alld e\'en less a system of territorially-distinctnatioll
states, postmoclerJI world ordcr is, rather, a pastiche of lJIultiple and overlap
ping authoritics - a quasi-feudal, "multiccntric" system,
"l\ledium theory" was first articulated by Harold Innis and then broughi
to a much wider <ludicncc by l\lar.slraIlMcLuhan, both of whom wcre Ca.
nadian scholars who taught at the Uni\'ersity of laronto, where I now have
the good fortune to teach, The central proposition of medium theory is thai
changing modes of communication ha\'e effects on the trajectory of social
e\olution aIHltlre values and beliefs of societies, l\ledium thcory traces thcse
effects to the unique properties of different modes of cOllllllunication _ to
1 1\ Icdiulll Theory, Ecological Holism,
and the Stud\', of \Vorld

Order Transformation

///
/4/
') ~ analys~
1/1
pO\'erh' of the many existing, mostly speculati\"c
/ of the "informatioll remllll;oll" r;..Cllls 'he illhe/ellt difflCllltfcs 01 dsscssing------=>
s\\'e;!Jing changcs as thcy lI/1fold Withont the confidcnce of hindsight, and
\\'ith no God's-eyc \'antage point, thcory becomcs an essential, though nec­
ess<Hil~' context-bollnd. tool by which to bring order to the apparent chaos
that Roods from abrupt ruptures in social and political institutions. Given
the lack of attention International Relations scholarship traditionally dc\"otes
to conllllunications, my first stcps in this dircction mllst be across disciplinary
boundarics-a potentially dangcrous expedition, though one that also offcrs
the prospect of shaking loose dogmatic assumptions ri\-cted in placc by pro­
longed amI artificial disciplinary closure. J
At the same time, it is important to recognize that approaches lifted from
other fields arc likely to suffcr their own peculiar deficiencies. We should
be careful to a\"oid cross-disciplinary hcro.worship for its own sakc. At the
very least, it is unlikely that any theory de\'ised within a particular discursive
field \\ith its own set of problems can be transp1<Jnted wholesale to another
without significant modification, To accommodate my own specific prob­
lemalique, the rudimentary insights of Innis, f\IcLuhan, and other medium
theorists \\'ill be embedded in an e\'Olutionary approach called "ecological
holism." Although the label is new, the approach itself actually synthesizes
and expounds \\·hat is already implicit in the work of many medium theo­
rists-that is, an open-ended, Ilollleductionist, thoroughly historicist view of
I~ 1;-" I ROllllC I ION Medium Theory 19

IUllwn cxistence that emphasizes contingcncy over continuity both in terms emplo~'ed here. For example. considerable work has been done on propa­
,f the lraiedor~' of social emlntion ;\ntl tl,e natme amI character of hmnan ~antla as ;111 instrlllllcnt of forcil;n polin'. noting thc way a slalc willinanip­
Icings. As will be made clear below, while this approach differs in significant nlate messages to garner international support or undermine foes. Z Other
\'ays from mainstream International Relations theorizing, it does find reso­ studies working in the content vein ha\'e focused on media reprcsentations,
,;\lICC in the work of at least one prominent theorist-namely. John Rug­ or thc "framing" of inlcrnational cvcnts, and thc way thcse rcprcsentations
,ic-and has important commonalities with others as well. ma\' inAuence domestic opinion and thus foreign policy outcomes,l Thcse
111 this ck,ptcr, I bcgiu with an overview of thc extant literaturc on com­ particular approachcs werc COll1ll10n during and aftcr thc Vietnam War,
iIlmications within the International Relations field. As will be re\'ealed when the novelty of "the first teledsed war" captured the attention of many
'e1ow, there is a dearth of scholarship that takes communications as its cen­ scholars,4 An important subset of this approach includes the many studics
ral foclls. l'vlorcovcr, what little exists is cithcr Aawcd in significant ways. or that examine the relationship between content and situation. In this gronp
i improperly designed for my central task: an examination of the rclation­ wc would find stndics on comnlllnication during eriscs;~ intercultural COIII­
hip between changes in communication techllologies and social and pol it­ munications;6 communications in negotiations and bargaining;' and war­
:al change at a \\'orld-order level. I then outline the central tenets of me­ time and/or diplomatic communications. R
limll theory. and offer a profile of some of the main contributors to this A further subset of thc content-bascd approachcs includcs thosc that
pproach, including the issues to which they ha\'e applied their insights. deal with cOlltrol. Work in this area typically examines the way ownership
fsing the \'arious criticisms of medium theory as a backdrop, I then put of mcdia crcates an idcological bias that circllJllscrihcs and shapcs dcbate
:mvard a substantial elaboration and modification of medium theory, tai­ to further the interests of capital or the state. 9 For example, the Gramscian
1ring it to the specific concerns of the study, and situating it more clearly school of International Relations theory emphasizes the relationship be­
,'ithin the International Relations field. The analytical scheme uscd to or­ twccn control O\'er mcdia alld cultural hegemony by transnational elitcs. 1lI
,anize the research in the ensuing chapters will emerge from the 11l0difi­ Another common focus of control-based approachcs is on how Aows of
ations made to medium theory. information deepen and solidify structures of dependency between the
information-rich North and thc information-poor South. 11 Policy proposals
designed to rectify this imbalance, such as that for a New World Infor­
mation Order, were a direct outgrowth of the conclusions reached by these
International Relations Theory and Communications theorists. I: Control-based studics thus tend to emphasize the way com­
munication Aows threaten "cultural sovereignty" or state autonomy while
There is no distinct "school" or "paradigm" of communications within extending cultural imperialism. ll Although the focus of these analyses is
he field of International Relations. In fact, there are few International Re­ on control of the medium, the intent is to show how such control deter­
ltions theorists of communication at all (the one important exception being mines content. which is the 1I1timate concern. From this perspective, new
~arl Deutsch). Individual theorists may allude to commllnication or infor­ communication technologics are important insofar as thcy cnhancc thc
nation in their studies, but rare are thc cases where an o\'ertly commlllli­ efficicnc\' and scopc of such control, and hence the potcntial penetration
ations approach is 'Hlopted. Although thc communications/International of hcgcmonic idcologics. But they are ultimately sccn as sllbsidiary vari­
~elations nexus remains underdeveloped, some distinet themes or issue­ ables within an O\'erarching global-capitalist mode of production, rather
reas can be identified where the interaction between the two is gh'en more than as transformati\'e in their own right.
han passing notice. Not all of the work on communications by International Relations the­
To the limited extent International Relations theorists ha\'e dealt with orists deals exclusively with content; the pioneering work by Karl Deutsch
ommunications explicitly, the focus has primarily been on cOlltellt to the on communications {lows is an important exception. H Deutsch, who is prob­
xclusion of technology-the im'erse of the theoretical perspecti\'e to be ably the figure most identifiable with the communicationsllnternational Re­
20 IYIRODUCTION Medium Theory 21

lations nexus, constructed a formidable and imlo\'ative body of work unique b~' itself tells us lillIe about the nature of the interaction. In other words,
for the central role he assigned to cOlllllllmicative interaction in the expla­ incrcased intercultmal eonnllllllication can casily lead to hostile backlasllcs
nation of political behavior. When opening any of Deutsch's many works, rather than to seducti\"e integration. Although students of Deutsch continued
the reader cannot help but be struck by a sharp contrast: while Deutsch his approach into the 1970s and beyond, the utility of a purely quantitative
crafts del;ant historical interpretatiollS, rich in detail, as hackdrops for his ,Inah-sis of conllllllllication Aows is limitcd. 17
anal~'sis, when his attention turns to explanation, IlOwe\'er, an O\'erarching, As in the field of comnlllllications proper, the overwhelming majority of
almost obsessive compulsion for statistical rigor predominates. Ilis concern studies on international relations and comllltmications focus 011 sOllie aspect
for the quantitative is so strong that Deutsch's formal analysis of comllluni­ of message content. In thesc studies, thc spccific message bcing transmiltcd
cation is thus restricted to the one part of the comnlllnication process that is thought to be the important variable; changes in the medium through
Gm bc measured: Aow. For Deutsch, communication flows determine the which the message is imparted are abstracted from the analysis. Those that
level of national and international integration. Concentrated e1usters ofcom­ do not deal exclusivcly with cOlltellt focus instead on conmllmications (lows,
nllmication palterns- measured in terms of the density and Aow of postal as exemplified in the work of Karl Deutsch. In hoth of thesc cases, Ihc
or telephone exchanges, for example-distinguish separate communities. mediulll itself is \'iewed as neutral and imisible. Changes in the technology
The unevenness of this distribution helps explain why nationalism is so of comlllllllication arc also ignored.
prevalent in world politics. The Aip side of this equation -and the expla­
nation for integration, according to Deutsch - is that the density of the Aow
determines the scope of the community. As Aows increase, parochialism 1'vlediuITI Theory
dissolves.
Deutsch's work is perhaps best situated as one important part of the mod­ I\ledium theory Ail'S this abstraction so to speak, fo('ming cxclllsively on >

ernization genre of scholarship that Aourished among political scientists, th~ intrillsic properties of the rTl~~Ii!!1ll.itseJf. Most important from this per­
development theorists, and sociologists between 1950 and 1980. 1; These specti\'e is the way large-scale changes in modes o(communicationshape
theorists acknowledged that the properties of media were important, but only - aRd e~l1Shdin bcha\ior;rmt!t~.fighrm-oepCfl1tcnror'Trc~gecQ.lili:Dt::SlTTd-"
along one narrow dimension: the extent to which they enhanced the Aow 111 domg so help to restructure social and politi<;<lLinsHtutions. According to

or efficicncy of conmlllllications. Such flows were seen as the tools by which this perspective, media arc not simply neutral channels for conveying 111 for­
local identities llIight be dissolved and then displaceJ by a more solidified, mahon bet\\"eell1\\·~lnorCell\lrOnmenrs.-mltarerafhcfenvirOlllftCTlts ill
national identity as part of a more general.state-building project. Hence, --.a.o.d-af: t"ellisel\"es.l~ 10 put it si~npl)~~-ed~lll theorYh~fdsthat cOlnmun i­
increased literacy among a population was seen as a key to general political cation "is a sphere where the technology involved may have an immense
development, as was the creation and maintenance of a centralized "mass significance for the society in which it occurs, and perhaps radically affect
media~ system. In focusing on the potential development of a pluralistic the concurrent forms of social and economic organization."IQ Unlike
security cOlmllllllity in Europe and elsewhere, Deutsch and his colleagues content-based analyses of communications, medium theory is necessarily
were simply extending this modernization paradigm beyond national bor­ historical in its approach, contrasting different media environments across
Jers. time, and tracing changes in the technology of communication for their
The main problem with Deutsch's analysis is that it adopted a nai\'e view effects on the evolution of social and political order. 211
of the assimilative tendencies of increased communication. Extrapolating Although medium theory is associated primarily with twentieth-century
from Deutsch's hypotheses, one would expect a single community of hu­ scholarship, many of its core propositions can be unearthed in e1assic texts
manity as comlllllllication becomes more dense, from tribes to nations to dating back to ancient Greece. In the Phaedrus and the Seventh Letter, Plato
regions to supranations. Yet the opposite is as often the case. Increased com­ has Socrates raise strong objections to the newly emerging wrillen form,
lIlunication Aow does not, by necessity, lead to common identities. 16 Flow arguing that it destroys memory and weakens the mind, even though, ironi­
22 INTRODUCTION Medium Tileory 23

Illy, Plato's own analytic epistemology was strongly conditioned by the ef­ tant consequenccs for society-that there are deep. qualitative differenccs
Tts of writing on mental processes, as Eric Ilavelock, \Valter Ong, and betwcen one comllllmic;ltions modc and another, differenccs that arc in
rnst Cell ncr have argued. ZI r\loral injunctions against the expression of turn reRected in the nature of the communications epoch. For McLnhan,
leas in specific media can be found in the Old 'Iestament, where the Sec­ history can be di\'ided into four snch comlllunications epochs, each of which
lid Conmundmcnt prohibits the iconographic depiction of CodY In the corresponds to the dominant mode of comllllmicalion of the time: oral,
,ssa." 011 the Origirr of umglJages, Rousseau takes up a common theme in writing. printing. and electronic. l\IcLuhan's nnique contribution was thc
lediunl theol),-the transition from primitive orality to writing-arguing argument that in each of these communications epochs, different media aet
la! wriling transforms the meaning of words and diminishes their \'itality as e:den.simlS of the human senscs with consequences for hoth cognition and
" suppressing dialects: "The more a people learn to read. the more are its social organization, For example. "oral societics" live primarily in an "car
laleets obliterated,"" \Vhat each of these perspeeti\'Cs shares is the central culture.- while writing, amI to a greatcr cxtent print, makes the sense of sight
roposition of medium theory: that the medium of eomnllmieation- far dominant. Following l\IcLuhan's sensory classification, the electronic re\,­
om being an empty vessel or transparent ehannel- has a significant inAu­ olution returns ns to the world of primitive orality, to villagc-like ell<:ounters,
ICC 011 the nature and content of human communication, but now on a global scale: hence, "the global village."zh
Probably the most famous (or infamous, depending on specific \'iew­ One of the morc popnlar. but confusing aspccts of McLuhan's analysis
Jints) practitioner of medium theory is Marshall McLuhan, as one of his is his binan' distinction between "hot" and "coo)" media. z7 "Hot" media
ell-known aphorisms. "the mediulll is the message" allests. In a series of extcnd a single sense in high definition; "cool" media arc low in definition.
ighly publicized books written during the 1960s. l\IcLuhan brought atten­ requiring audience participation. For l\IcLuhan, examples of the former
'In to the central principles of medium theory. mostly through his idiosyn­ include print. radio, and film. while examples of the latter would inclnde
atie style of writing, which was peppered with one-line aphorisms and gross colloquial specch, telephonc. and television,z~ Though clearly the distinc­
'neralizalions that became catch-phrases of the decade, H As Lapham notes, tion is debatable (by most accounts, print is a less passive medium than
;eldom in living memory had so obscure a scholar descended so abruptly tele\'ision in terms of audience participation) like many of McLnhan's
z
1111 so remote a garret into the center ring of celebrity circus: ' Indeed, "prohes" it had thc unfortnnate conscquence of dirccting deh<lte about me­
\\' scholars can rival MeLuhan for achieving such popular notoriety-a dium theory awa~' from its core propositions to l\IcLuhan's morc spcctacnlar
;e McLuhan himself seemed to relish as proof of his own proelamations. but incidental contributions. "l\IcLuhanesque" slogans-such as "the elec­
ilpc;tring in \\loody Allen films and popular television shows. and professing tric light is purc information" or "c1ectric circuitry is Oricntalil',ing thc
, speak in the disconnected, pastiche mode of the "electronic age: l\1c­ West" - became so associated with medium theory that by the time of Mc­
uhan saw his role in therapeutic terms: he was to be the oracle of a new Luhan's death in 1980 few outside of the communications field were aware
orld on the \'erge of being born. Not surprisingly. the self-imposed trans­ of the approacll.~Q
'rmation from bookish literary professor to postmodern electronic guru Although he was clearly the most famous, McLuhan was merely one
ienated many still ensconced in the tombs of frpogTdphica, In an ironic among a Illllllber of other scholars working along IIIcdium theory Iincs in
:ist of his theorizing. McLuhan's meteoric rise ma~' ha\'e had the unfor­ the 1950s and I960s, The inlcraction among these thcorists was strong.
mate consequence of obscuring the message beneath the messenger. t\lan~' of them met regularly at the University of 'Ioronto-constituting an
Clothed in the "mosaic" form of argumentation l\IcLuhan preferred informal group no\\' referred to as the "Toronto School of Communiea­
mosaic" in contrast to the linear-style of reasoning which l\IcLuhan be­ tions."JO Generally considered the founder of this "school" was the Canadian
eved to be a product of the Age of Typography), t\IcLuhan's message took economic historian Harold Adam Innis,J1 Innis had established himself as
; its starting point some of the more basic themes of medium theol)', re­ an expert on trade in Canadian staple resources before turning to the history
ea\'ing them into electronic age prophecy, Like other medium theorists, of communications. JZ t\IcLuhan's analysis \\'as significantly inAuenced by
IcLuhan believed that changes in modes of communication ha\'e impor- Innis's approach -so much so, in fact. that t\IcLuhan had once described
2-+ I NTHOIHICTI ON Medium Theory 25

his own work as merely a "footnotc" to Innis's scholarship. Although both having a master logic that mauifests itself in thc uncnding risc amI fall of
shared a notoriously densc aud complex writing style, lunis's work was morc civilizatious, Certainly onc could takc a "stroug" reading of, for example, his
cOIl\"Cntional in acadcmic terms. Fmthcrmore, Innis ami I\IcLnhan oper­ space/time bias categorics and scc in them a kind of reductionism at work.
ated at diffcrcut b·e1s of analysis." While I\IcLuhan directed most of his Howe\'cr, a morc gcncrous rcading of Innis's work would highlight his cm­
('OUCCIIIS to thc cffcct of mcdia on scmory organization and thought, Innis phasis on social and historical contcxt, on thc way different mcdia have
conccutratcd primarily on largc-scalc social organization and cultme, or, to pote/ltialitie,~ for control according to thc way thcy arc cmploycd in diffcrcnl
cite onc of hmis's more famous titles, on Empire a/l(l CommllnicatiOlls. H circumstanccs. For lunis, thc cmphasis is on the interaction betwcen this
Ilc~ l'f outlines the ccntral thcmcs iu Innis's mcdium thcory: social context a11<1 medium form, ralher than on thc modc of couulllmica­
tion in abstraction: "A medium of communication has an important influ­
History is perceived as a series of cpochs separated by discontinuity. encc on thc disscmination of knowledgc over space and over timc amI it
F;tch is distinguishcd by dominant forms of mcdia that absorb, rcc­ bccomcs ncccssary to sludy ils characteristics in ordcr to appraisc ils influ­
ord, and transform information into systems of knowledge conso­ ence in its cllltural setting:'F From this reading, Innis's space/time biascs arc
JJ;lnt with thc institutional power structme appropriatc to the society seeu morc as shorthaud dcsignates for the constraints imposcd on ccrtain
iu qucstiou. The interaction betwecn media form and social reality typcs of communications by particular mcdia, rather than programmatic
crcates various biases, which strongly affect the society's cultmal statements on the nature of communications itself. Above all, Innis was
oricntatiou and valucs." conccmcd with undcrstauding ci\'ilizationaltransformation through thc JCIlS
of changing medium technology-a hithcrto novel focus that required sig­
Two prominent aspects of Innis's work are his views on space/time biases nificant conceptual innovation to alcrt readers that communication mcdia
of differcnt modcs of communication. and on monopolies of knowlcdge. arc not mcrc cmply \'cssels.
Innis argued that different media often exhibit an inherent bias toward either A~ noted in my introduction, medium theory did not generate a widc­
timc or spacc, and that thcse biases are rcRectcd in the character of ci\'ili­ sprcad acadcmic following initially, possibly as a result of its introduction by
zations. Dmable media that are difficnlt to transport-such as stone, clay, Innis and I\IcLuhan, Innis's rclatively carly dcath forecloscd thc possibility
or parchmcnt-have a time-bias; thesc societies tcnd to be tradition-oricnted, of his complcting the morc comprchensivc projcct suggcsted by his two
giving cmphasis to custom and continuity O\'er changc, and with a strong preliminary works, Empire and COlllmunications and The Bias of Commu­
attachmcnt to thc sacred. Fmthermorc, time-biased ci\·j)izations oftcn lead /Iicatiom, A~ a consequcncc, hc is known mostly through sccoml-hand in­
to hicrarchical social orders with elite groups; such as Egyptian high priests terpretations. In the case of I\IcLuhan, his idiosyncratic style probably did
or thc medieval Catholic clergy. Space-biased media, such as papyrus or more to obscure the theoretical basis of his work. Quite intentionally, Mc­
papcr, arc lighter amI more portablc and tend to support cxpansionist em­ Luhan chose to ignore the social scicnce conventions of thc day amI snffcrcd
pires characterized by large administrative apparatuses and secular institu­ a predictably dismissh'e response from academia. However, his "mosaic"
tions. Using a form of dialectical analysis, Innis argucd that both types of stylc of writing may be morc resonant with contemporary postmodern au­
ci\'ili7;ltions ha\'e a tcudency over time to ossify into rigid and uIHcsponsi\'c diences as c\'idcnced by the I\IcLuhancsque renaissance that appcars to bc
regimes. A reaction occms at the fringes of society, where marginalized gaining momentum.l~
groups take advantage of new technologies of communication, which in turn Nonetheless. mediulTl theory has proved to be a useful tool for a wide
results in the ascendancy of a new order. \'ariety of scholars working in different issue-areas, many of whom offer a
Clearly, Innis was very much a part of the early-twentieth-century tradi­ more cOll\'entional academic style of analysis than either of the two. A con­
tion of civi[izationa[ analysis, associated with Oswald Spengler, Arnold Toyn­ temporary of Innis and I\IcLuhan and a member of the informal ''Toronto
bee, and Pitrim Sorokin. 36 As with these theorists, Innis's work has been SchooL" classicist Eric Ha\'elock has studied the transition to alphabetic
criticized for a kind of cyclical determinism, whereby history is viewed as literacy in ancient Greece, analyzing its impact on classical epistemology.39
INTROlJlJCTIO!'l Medium Theory 27
In a similar \'Cin, social anthropologists Jack Coody and Ian Watt ha\'e stud­ proaches to comnlllllication technology, and Jeftus with only "a soggy con­
ied the transition from primitive orality to writing for its impact 011 both clusion rathcr than with detailed scholarship."'" Book rcviews of mcdiulll
cognition and social organization, as has Walter Gng from a more general theorists are particularl~' repetitions, so much so that one gets the impression
perspeeti\'e,"o II istorian Elizabeth Eisenstein has undertaken an extensivel~' that reprimanding medinm thcory on this score is a formulaic device. Thus
documented analysis of the cultmal and scientific changes ;lSSociated with Havelock's work on the Greck cnlightcnlllcnt is castigatcd for "clinging ...
the shift from script to print in medie\'al Europe.'" And though less often to a simplistic reduetionism"that "seems to want to make alphabetic literacy
associated with the formal approach, many of the central propositions of the sole causc of thc change In EisclIStcin, one rcvicwcr detects "a
medium theory can be found in the work of cnltmal anthropologists like certain reductionist streak" and "a tendcncy to overestiln<Jte printing as
I.ewis I\lnmford and Ernst Gellner, who emphasize the role of technology against other forces of change."";
in social changeY While most of these theorists touch on large-scale his­ Indeed. a curso~' glance at I\IcLuhan's work in particular might offer
torical changes associated with innovations in conllllllllicatiOll media, none substantiation for these criticisms, especially gi\'en his pcnchant for poctic
ha\'e focused exclusively on the issue with which I am concerned here: world hyperbole -a style of writing that docs not lend itself well to cavcat. Supcr­
order transformation, The next section prO\'ides an oven'iew of the modifi­ ficial illustrations of technological determinism are not hard to find in books
cations and elaborations that I make to medium theory in order to accom­ concei\'Cd as aphoristic "probes" rather than scientific trcatiscs. In fact, Mc­
modate it to this problematique.
Luhan's work is constituted by them. In describing his project, McLuhan
once admittcd that "I don't explain-I cxplorc" -;1 rcvealing quote tlwt bcgs
Theory and Epistemology the qllestion of the gronnds on which snch analysis should bc held account­
able."" \ "hilc a strong argument could be madc that a charge of technolog­
ical detcrminism is probably bcsidc the point of nlllch of Mel ,1111<1n's work,
As alluded to abm'e, no theory is without its warts, and medium theo~'
is certainly not exempt. In order to accOllllnodate this particular <Jpproach the charge itself shollld bc taken seriously in any analysis, sllch as this one,
that attempts something more conventional than bullet-likc, aphoristic
to Illy own set of questions, some retooling will be necessary if only to O\'er­
probes.
come some of the more confusing <Jspects of I\lcLuhan and Innis's notori­
Figme I offers a picture of the technological dclcrminist/monocal1Sal
ollSl~' difficult styles. The elaborations and revisions to mediulll theory that
reduetionist model of change. Though no one particular medium theorist
follow can be grouped into two categories, both of them ha\'ing to do with
can be said to sllbscribe fully to such a simplistic model of change, some
the question of cansality. The first is with respeet to the rclath'e emphasis
employ language or semantic inflections that arc at times consistent with
placed on comlllunication technologies as independent \'ariables; the sec­
such a picture of the interplay between technology and society. Eisenstein's
ond has to do with clearly articulating the exact nature of the effects that
use of the word "agent" to describe an inanimate technology- the printing
arise frolll a change in the mode of communication. I will consider each of
these in turn. press-is a case in pointY I\loreO\'er, this base/snperstructure model is a
familiar one across a \'ariety of thcorclic;J1 perspcctives (orthodox M;HXislll
being the prime example) where single overarching "master" variables a~e
Toward a Nonreductiollist J\'ledium Theor)' held as determinant."~ When critics of medium theorists reprimand them
for technological determinism they are implicitly invoking this flawed pic­
A recurring criticism of mediulll theory is that it tends toward a form of
ture of causality. Any attempt at revising medium theory should confront
monocallsal reductionism and technological determinism. Certainly 1\1c­
the man~' interrelated pitfalls inherent in such a simplistic model of change.
Luhan bears the brunt of this criticism, though other medium theorists are
The most serious flaw in this model is that it tends to view the introduc­
not immune. Not unusual would be Carey's harsh indictment of 1\ IcLuhan
tion of a new technology of communication as an autonomous force with
for a thorough "technological determinism" that closed down new ap-
certain definite and predictable results irrespeetive of the social and histor­
zK I :--lTRODUCTION Medium Theory 29

historical change as a radical disjuncture, with the tecllllology as thc hinge­


a \icw of cpodlal changc now widely discrcdited among historians:'"
Superstructure / Ideas / Behaviors '10 amid these pitfalls, we must underscore the "social embcddedness" of
technology. \\'e must place greater emphasis on the historical and social
context in which teellllologies arc introduced, an insight most forcefully
made by social cOllStrttcti\'ists of technology.ln These theorists trace the way
socialnceds de\"Clop toward which certain innovations are applied. 'I 'he 1II0st
comprehensi\"C of thcm show how social forces in conjunction with available
material resources and technical knowledge mold the constrttction and in­
\'entiOlI of new technologies. In doing so, they dispel the illusion maintained
by the teellllological deterlllinist that tecllllologies cnler society amI generate
specific social forces ami/or ideas de 110\'0. As I will show in chapters 2 and
Base / Material Instrument of Technology 5. the emergences of printing and hypermedia respectively were not sudden,
"ont-of-nowhere" de\doplllents. In both cases, social needs drovc tecllllD­
logical innO\'ation. The creation of new technologies was, in turn, depen­
FI G II REI. The technological deterlllinist/mono-callsal redllctionist lIlodei of dcnt 011 the existing stock of scientific knowledge (broadly understood) as
change well as the <J\'ailable material resources. Technologies are always, in this
sense. socially constructed,
Bnt despite its strengths as a correcti\'e to the technological determinist
ical context in which it is introdnced. Specific social phenomena are seen model, the social comtrttcli\'ist position has a tendency to fall into the op­
as invariably tied to a specific technology, as if the technology itself had the posite trap and slight. if not ignore altogether, any independent effects at­
power to generate beha\'iors and ideas de 1I0ra. Thus. technological deter­ tributable to the teclmology itself ollce introduced. It is important to remcm­
minists tend to put forward such reductionist claims as "the printing press ber tll<1t although social forces lIIay give direction to tccllllological
created imlidduality" or "the Reformation is the child of the printing innO\'ation, they are not completely determinant; once introduced a tech­
press" -claims that clearly fall apart upon closer ill\"Cstigations that re\'eal nolog\' becollles part of the material landscape in which hunwn agents and
the multiplicity of factors in their de\·elopment. By attributing "generati\'e" social groups interact. ha\'ing many unforeseen effects. These are the effects
causal powers to the mode of communication, the technological determinist the medium theorist is most concerned with. As I will show in part 1 of this
model tends to slight the extent to which the technology itself emerges out study. one of the more cnthusiastic early supporters of printing technol­
of a particular context and is itself influenced by social, cultural, and his­ og~'- one of the main social groups responsible for its rapid spread - was the
torical forces. This relati\'e neglect of contextual factors is especially mis­ Roman Catholic Chmch. But the salTle bishops and monks who activcly
leading not only because it tends to pridlege the technology over other encouraged the establishment of local printing houses never anticipated the
factors, but also because it produces faulty projections for the introduction way heresies. like the Protestant Reformation, would thrive with the wide­
of a similar technology in different cultures and contexts. Furthcrmore. the spread a\'ailability of this ne\\' technology. The full effects of printing wcnt
picture of causality employed sets up a strong binary opposition between the unforeseen by the \'ery actors who encouraged and shaped its early devel­
"material" and the "ideal," with social forces and ideas placed in a subordi­ opment. So. while social constrttcti\'ists of technology underscore the way
nate, deri\'ati\'e position to the material instrttment of technology. And be­ social forces shape teclmologieal innovation, they tend to overlook the pos­
cause social consequences are seen as arising out of. or generated by, the sibility that technological innO\'ation, in turn, could have an impact on
technology itself in this way, the technological determinist model portrays socieh' itself. But if technological determinists gi\'e a misleading portrayal of
INTRODUCTION Medium Theory 31

thcse unforeseen effects and social constructivists slight them altogether. forces and ideas ultimately reAects a multiplicity of factors that cannot bc
whcrc docs that Icave lIS? reduccd to a singlc O\Tr;Hching "master" variable. Instcad, it focuses on the
The way I suggest we articulate this process is by reAecting on and am­ existing stock of social forces and ideas, asking ,,·hich will likcly flomish or
plifying one of the more prominent metaphors in medium theory-media ,,'ithcr dcpending on their "fitness" or match wilh the new comll1lmicalions
as cmircmmcnts-and by the usc of a Darwinist c\'Olutionary analogy to endromncnt. It "Ail'S" the pictmc of causality. so to speak. From this per­
descrihe the processes by which marginal forces on thc bordcrs of society specti,·e, a ne,,' mode of c01l11lHmication is not an "agent" bnt rathcr a pas­
arc brought into the center by the unintended eonsequenccs of tecllllolog­ sin', structmal feature of the tecllllologieal lamlseape in which 11I1I1wn be­
ical innovation." ings interact, It imposes certain constraints or limitations on the nature ami
In classical I)am'inian theories of e\'olution. cm'ironmcntal changes typc of possible human comnnmications. while facilitating other types, but
strongly condition the differential stJrvi"al and reproduction of species,;c it docs not impose thought or beha\'ior in any crude one-to-one fashion. It
Although specics arc vitally dependent OIl their environmcnt, thc cm'iron­ is an emirOlnncllt. ;\ml likc natmal cm·iromnents, when it changes sonIc
ment itself cannot be said to engage in the selection process b~' acting on species ,,·ill be fa\'Ored ,,·hile others will be disadvantaged, not because of an
species; rather, innovations and genetic mutations producc a "ariety of physi­ acti,'e intervention 011 the part of the em'ironment itself, but rather because
cal characteristics which, in turn, arc selected blindly according to thcir thc fnnctional propertics of thc environmcnt eithcr reinforce or constrain
"fitness" or mateh with the environment. Not to be confused with the characteristics and interests of the species within it. The perspective is
nineteenth-centmy "Social Darwinist" vicws of progrcssivc de"elopmcnt." historic;ll1~ contingent. insofar as thc type of cffects that cnsuc from a changc

emlution from this perspective assumes no inherent direction or pmpose in the commtmications em'ironment depend entirely on the extant social
but is a contingent, open-ended historical process, groups. institutions, and ideas of the time in question.
Similarly, ,1 change in the mode of connlllmication (cmironmcnl) will 'Ii) cxtend the analogy. there arc two quite distinct "spceies" upon which
"fann" certain social forces and ideas (species) by means of a functional bias the sclection process bears in a changing eon11l1l1nications environment.
toward some and not others, just as natmal environments determine ,,'hich which brings me to my second modification to medium theory,
species prosper by "selecting" for certain physical characteristics, In other
words. the properties of a communications em'ironment-the unique ,,'ays 1\1'0 effects: Distributional Changes </lId Changes to

in ,,'hich information can be stored, transmitted, and distributed in that


Social Epistemolog\'

environment- "fa\'Or" the interests of some social forces and ideas o\'er oth­
ers, These social forces and ideas flomish or thri\'e, while others are placed \Vhen a communications cm'iromllent undergoes fundamental transfor­
at a significant disadvantage and tend to wither o\'er time, Unlike both the mation. two different types of effects can be discerned. Consider the follow­
technological determinist and social conslructi,'ist positions, unintended ing quote by Good~':
consequences loom large from this perspecti,'e, \Ve ,\'Ould anticipate, in
other words, that some social forces a11(1 ideas that ,,'ere nwrgilwlized in one Systems of connlHmieation arc clearly related to what l1Ian can makc
commtmications em'ironment may resonate strongly oncc that environment of his world both internally in terms of thought and externally in terms
changes. Likewise. those actors and groups that initially ga\'e support to, and of his social and cultmal organization, So changes in the means of
drovc the early development of, a new technology of communication may c01l1111lmication ;He linked in dircct as well as indircct ways to changcs
find themselves at a disad,'antage once the full characteristics of the new in the patterns of human interaction,;~
communications environment take root.
Good~' is alluding to the dual effects of any change in communication
This Darwinist evolutionary analogy is particularly useful because it
moves away from the technological determinist view of technologies "gen­ technologies. I call these hm effects distributional changes and changes to
erating" specific social forces and ideas. It affirms that the genesis of social social epistelllologr respecti\'ely,
32 INTROlJUCTION Medium Theory 33

On the one ham\' a change in the comll1lmicatiuns environment has Human beings tend to be creatmes of habit, and social forces conlJJfise mallY
specific tangible, (li.~/riblJ/iollal effeels on the soci,11 and political infrastruc­ habitual indidduals all of whom have limited lifespam ,md thus relatively
tme. In Innis's formulation, "Inventions in communication compel realign­ short time-horizol1S, The eonseqnences of t()(lay's short-tenn choices - sneh
ments in the nlOllOpoly or the oligopoly ofknowledge.";; This effect depends as promoting Ihe de\'elopment of a new technology that will makc specific
on two ;1SSlIIuptions alluded to above: first is the 1I10st basic proposition of tasks simpler or more efficient (cheaply reproducing bibles, for exanl­
medium theory. that specific comnllmications em'ironments ha\'e a certain plel-are notusuall~' understood in terms of thcir long-tcrm ilnplic<ltions or
"logic" or "natme" 1I0t in any determinist sense, but only in the sense of uninlcnded consequences, As I will outline in later el1<Iplcrs, this certainly
"m;lking 11Innan communications of certain types easier or more difficlllt.";(, describes the predicament of the Roman Catholic Chllfch \'is-a-\'is the print­
The second assumption is that society is made up of discernible social forces ing press. These distributional ch<lnges -changes, tl1<lt is, in the relative
that, while not necessarily "rational" in the HOlllo eCOllOl1liCllS, utility­ power of social forces - arc perhaps Ihe most dircct conscqucncc of a change
maximizing scnse of the term, are nonetheless moti\'alcd by certain histori­ in the mode of conn111lnication.
calk amI culturally varied interests and goals. By "social forces," I mean On the other hand. to rclmll to Goolly's rcmarks abovc, a change in the
actual social groups, actors, and various forms of social organization-all connnunications em'ironment affects not just social organization, but also
11Oflllati\'e or goal-<lriven social behaviors. The methodological task becomes the "internal" world of ideas amI ways of thinking.;'1 Conmlunieation envi­
clear when the two assumptions are married: identifying those social forces ronments. in other words, also select ideas, social constructs and modes of
whose interests, goals, and logics of organization arc likely to "fit" with the cogllition. '11) take but one specific exa III pie oftcn cited by lIlediumtheorists,
new communications environment, and those whose do nol. Typically, those the introduction of writing encomages abstract thought bccause words and
social forces whose interests, goals, or logics "fit" the new communications ideas can be manipulated amI cum pared to a greater extent tll<ln thcy can
emironmcnt do not just survive in the same form as before. They are em­ in oral societies. t,lI Ilere we arc conceflled with the way comll1unication
powered by the new means of communication at their disposal. They find technologies inAuence what Ruggie labels a transformatiun in social epis­
a "niche" alld Aomish, and, as a result, become a more prominent feature /el1lologl'.(,! Social epistemology refers broadly to the wcb-of-beliefs into
of the world politicallalldscape. Likewise, social forces that may ha\'e thrived which a people arc acenlturated and through which thcy pcrcei\'e the world
in onc commlmications environment may find themseh-es at a significant arollnclthem. t,: It ellCOlnpaSses an interwu\'en sci of historie<llly contingent
disad\'antage once that environment changes. intersubjective menial characteristics, r<lnging from spatial or temporal cog­
But the question naturally arises: \\'hy cannot social forces merely adapt niti\'e biases, 10 shared s~'I11bulic forms, to various group identities, or to
or control technologies to their own ends? One obvious reason is that the "imagined communities," which are unique to a specific historical context,
properties of a comlllunications environlllentmight be at such fundamental and differentiate one epoch from anothcr. 61 Among French social theorists
odds to the core interests, or raisoll d'e/re, of particular social actors or groups and medie\'alists it is referred tu as lIIell/alites collecli\'es-the sl1<lrcd mcntal
that they have no choice but to resist vigorously (often with lillie success) predispusitions of a pupulation in time-and it pla}'s a crucial rule in their
thc fmther spread of that environment. But part of the reason also relates to inlcrprclation of cultl1fes.t.~
the rehltive illAexibility of social forces. Because social forces acquire a cer­ In highlighting changcs to suci<ll epistelllulugy, mediulll theory has a
tain "path-dependency" or institutional inertia based on the shared habits of close affinity to sociology of knowledge or social constructivist approaches. M
thought and action of the multitudes of indi\'iduals that comprise them, the~' At its most basic, what these perspecti\'es share is thc bclief that a wide range
cannot easily adapt to new circumstances. Their institutional incumbenc~', of social. economic, and political factors shape the genesis and struclure of
as Gould calls it, "reinforces the stability of the pathway once the little quirks human thought and behavior, and thus the contours of social epistemology.
of early Aexibility push a sequence into a finn channel.";~ Likewise Spru~1 l'vlediurn theory adds a materialist dimension to these perspectives by focus­
notes how "transaction costs, set belief systems, and standard operating pro­ ing on changes in communication technology. A common example of an
cedures mitigate against frequent o\'erhaul" of social forces and institutions.;~ argument linking technological inno\'ation and social cognition in this way
H INTROl>l'CTION Medium Theory
~s

is Lcwis Mumford's treatment of the impact of thc e10ck on \Vcstern society a new social epislclllolo~'- rclhreading thc wcbs of significancc, in other
in '/l'dlllies I1m{ Cil'ili:l1firJII. M Prior to thc elock, the mcaslHe of timc was words.
determined or~;mically. that is, hy the sun and the scasons; bcginning in the It is important 10 empha,si7.e thaI thc "fitncss" betwccn e1cmcnts of social
fOlHlcenth cenlury. lhe measure of time was reoriented by the clock with epistcmologv and a ncw conn11lmic,ltions environment is largely an il/fer­
important social ramifications. The clock "dissociatcd time frolll human gel/erafiol/a{ as opposcd to an il/frap,sychic proccss. In olhcr words, it docs
e"ents ;lIld helped create the belief in an indepcndent world of mathemat­ not mean that each indi,'idnaJ person will snddcnJy abandon long-held
ically IIIcasurablc scqucnces .. ,"67 As Mumford gocs on to cxplain: mclaph~sic,ll presnppositions ami cognitivc biases as a rcsult of their expo­
sure to a new conn11lmicatiollS em'ironmcnl. New technologies of com­
Whcn one thinks of the day as an abstract space of time, one does munication do nol carry within lhem mysterious magical properties thaI
not go to bed with the chickcns on a winter's night: one invents O\'Crpower those with whom lhey comc in contacl. Nor do they come
wicks, chimncys, lamps. gaslights, electric lamps, so as to lISe all equipped with their own speci,ll social cpistemology, "Individualisn'" as a
the hours belonging to the day. When one thinks of time, not as a s~'I11bolic form is not im'ariably lied to the printing press (although, as I hope
scquence of experiences, but as a collection of hours. minutes. and to demonstmte below, the forlller flourishcd in lhe cnvironmcnt of the lat­
seconds, the habits of adding time and saving time come into ex­ ter). Rather, it means that in a particular cOl1n11lmications environment,
istence. Time took on the character of an enclosed space; it could particular elements of social epislemo'o~' will have a bcttcr chance of find­
be divided, it could be filled up, it could evcn be expanded by the ing a "niche" ami thus survi,'ing aud flourishing ovcr limc. In other words,
invention oflabor-saving instruments.... Abstract time became the an increasing portion of those accnlturatcd into a new comnllmicatiol1s en­
new medium of existence. 68 "ironment will C0111e to sce a parlicular symbolic form or social construct
as more "natural" and "reasonable" -more consistent wilh lheir ovcrall com­
l\·lumford's social construction of timc nicely illustrates the type of inter­ mlmic;ltions experiem:e - and it is lhrough th is intergeneralional "selection"
prcli"c approach that should be employed when attention turns to the effects process that it will flourish O\'CT time.
of thc mode of commlmication on social cpistemology. Effcctively cxploring Trcating c1J;1nges to soci;ll epislcmology in lhis wa)'-111<lt is. as a kind of
the link bctween communication technology and social epistemology moves "selection" process in which specific ideas, s)'mbols, values, and beliefs flour­
llS cOllSiderabl~' into the rcalm of semiotics and the sludy of symbolic forms, ish or "'it her depending on ;1 chance "filness" wilh the conl1nunications
This mO\'c neccssitatcs a much richcr type of interpreti"c analysis th,m thc em'irolllnent- bears a close reselllb\;lIIce to an ;lpproaeh developed by hi­
methodological strictures of more positi,'ist-oriented theorizing allows: thick, ologist Richard Dawkins, ;lud laken up by olhers, called "memclies."7J
:1S opposed to thin, description in Clifford Geertz's f0rJ1111lation. 69 \\'e must Dawkins and olher practilioners of memetics believe that the basic principles
he able to tap into and unearth the eonstituti"e social norms of a period, the of "descent with modification" thaI Darwin oUllined apply not just 10 "genes"
unconscious boundaries and biases that frame experience, the symbolic but to the processes of cultural e\'Olution as well-to the relative survival of
forms that give meaning to bchavior for a people.- n These social norms and different culturalunils that Dawkins called "memcs";
symbolic forms are crucial because thcy provide what might bc called "the
metaphysical underpinnings" of the constitutive features of world order. If
only by llneonseious biases and orientations common to a people, "social Examples of memes are tunes, ideas, catch-phrascs, clothes, fashions,
epistemology" is implicated in the architecture of world order. r..ledium ways of making pots or building arches. Just as genes propogate them­
theory, as used here, does not argue that the mode of communication gen­ seh-es in the gene pool by leaping from body to body via sperm or
erates these symbolic forms and cognitive biases; rather. it argues that eggs, so memes propagate themseh-es in the meme pool by leaping
changes in the mode of communication will "favor" or allow for the selection from brain to brain "ia a process which, in lhe broad sense, can be
among the extant symbolic forms and biases of a society, thus gi\"ing rise to called imitation, If a scientisl hears, or reads about, a good idea, he
,lJ INTRODUCTION Medium Theory ,7

passes it on to his colleagues amI students. Ill' mentions it in his ar­ changcs refer to changcs in the relati\'C power of social forccs, while clwnges
tidcs and his lectures. If the idca catehes 011. it can he said 10 propogate to social cpislcnlology refcr to changcs <I1nong e1Clnents of thc prc\'ailing
itself. sprcadin~ from brain to brain. 7z mcn/ali/es collecli\'e,s, Thesc two conceptually distinct effccts will in lum
IHO\'idc the basis for the anal~,tical scheme to be employcd in the chapters
Although DawkillS and othcr practitioners of "memetics" have nol, as far to follow. The study is di\'ided into two parts, both of which arc cOlnpriscd
a,s I know. concei\'ed of a selection mechanism that includes chalH,;ing of three chapters:
modes of l'oll1nllmication, there is an obvious compatibility in the ap­
proaches. ,\nd DawkillS's lengthy list of typical "memes" (tunes, ideas, catch­
• the first chapter in each part IHO\'ides a historical amI descriptive
phrases, ete) briugs up an important anal~1ical point: the ideas, values, be­
O\'en'iew of the de\'elopmcnt of a new eomllllmieations
liefs, symbolic forms, and social constructs that comprise the social
el1\'ironmcnt - printinf,; in part I and hypermedia in part 2
epistemolo~\ of a lime would obviollSly blankct a wide spectflnn of di\'Cfse
(chaptcrs 2 amI 5);
traits. 'I'rackinf,; down every single one of those that flourish and wither with
the second ch<lpter examines the distribntionaJ changes that resnlt
a chauge in the mode of eomnHmication would surel~' be a formidable task,
from the change in the mode of comnlunication (chapters' a11(1
So for ;m;lh tical purposes I have broken them down into a manageable () I;
(though not necessarily exhaus!i\'e) set. In the chapters to follow that focus
• the third chapter examines the changes to social epistcmology that
011 changcs to social epistemologv (4 and 7), I examine three specific de­
rcsnlt from the change in the mode of conllllunication (chapter,s 4
ments: indi\'idllal idell/itics, spatial biases, and il/lagined communities. As I
amI 7).
hope to demonstrate, changes in all three of these elements (the way "the
self' is COllt'ci\'ed, the way space is ordered, and the way group identities arc
imagined). arc crucial in providing what might be called the "metaph~'sical
underpinnings" of world order. As I also hope to show, changes in modes of Ecologicalllolisln and t\lediulI1 Theory
conn11lmication have an important impact on their e\'olution.
In SIlm, changes in modes of communication ha\'c an important effect Ilm'iug made these suhstantialmodificaliollS and e1aboraliol1.S to nledinm
on Ihe naturc ami character of society and politics. Thcse cffccts \'ary in theory. I am now in a better position to articulate more clearly the Incta­
teflllS of thc social and historical context in which the technology is devel­ theorctical assumptiollS on whi<:h this study rests. The nomeductive, no­
oped. New technologies of communication do not generate specific social lutionary medium theory approach outlined abO\'e 11Il1St, by necessity, cn­
forces and/or ideas, as technological determinists would ha\'C it. Rather, they compass a 111uch wider perspecti\'e on the dynamics of hUluan/technological
rc,cilita/e amI com/rain the extant social forces and ideas of a society. The interaction than the simple 1110110causal picture portrayed in figure I. Figure
11\'pothesized process can be likened to the interaction between species and 2 depicts what I call an "ecological holist" picture of human existence. This
a changing n;ltural environment. New media environments favor certain figure essentially Imcarths amI clearly articulates the cultural materialist IU1­
social forces ami ideas by means of a functional bias toward some and not derpinning that is at least implicit in the writings of Innis, and perhaps l110St
others, much the same as natural environments determine which species explicit in the work of those medium theorists with a social anthropological
prosper by "selecting" for certain physical characteristics. In other words, background like Goody, ~Iumford, and Gellner. It is significantly influenced
social forces and ideas survive differentially according to their "fitness" or by the work of the French Annales school of historians, represented by Brau­
match with the new media environment-a process that is both open-ended del, Duby, and Le Goff. Each ring in the figure refers to a conceptually
and contingent. distinct component of human existence, none of which are reducible to the
There are two conceptually distinct ways in which these effects operate: others. The lines separating each component are not rigid, but blend into
distributional changes and changes to social epistemology. Distributional one another at the margins.
,;') INTRO()lICTIO:,-/
Medium Theory N

potations and organizations on the formal side to habits of actions and gen­
eralmodcs of organizillg l(lllllan intcraction alld subsistellee 011 the illformal
side,-; Sitnated between the material environment and institntions is tech­
Ilolog\·. In its narrow sense, tecllllologv refers to applied knowledge, bnt here
the terlll is nsed in its more comnlOn sense to encompass both practical or
applied knowledge (formally, teclmolog\') as well as the material instruments
or artifaets of technology (formally, technics), such as the printing press. 7fi
As a material artifact, technology is constrained by the available resources
of a time and place: hut as a tool it is always conditioned by and emerges
out of existillg social institntions, knowledge, and skills-what we earlier
referred to as the "social elllbeddedness" oftecllllology.ln ontological Icrms,
technology should not he seen as mercly an appendage to human society,
but a dceph- interh\'ined constituti\'C feature oflnllnan society. In Mazlish's
words:

The e\'idence now seems strong that humans evolved from the other
animals through a continuous interaction of tool, physical, and
melltal-emotional changes. The old view-that humans arrived on the
FI G 1I R E 2, Ecological Holism e\'Olutionary scene flllly formed al\(I then proceeded to discover tools
and the new \\a\'s of life that they made possihle-no longer appears
acceptable.-­

At the center are the hasic inherited neurophysiological adaptatioll.~ alld The last ring refers to the material or geopf,ysical elH'irrJIIl1lent, including
traits shared by the species as a whole. Not to be confused with crude clas­ demographics, disease. climate, and natural resources, all of which have a
sical realist speculations on a fixed al\(I determining "human nature," nor loose constraining effect 011 the broad trajectory and character of social evo­
with the neoclassical "rational" actor assumptions,-1 these dispositions are lution.-~ For millennia theorists ha\'C speculated on the impact of these broad
confined to certain morphological or neurological properties shared by the material factors on the nature of human societies, amI there is a strong
species as a whole. The mere fact that they are so general as to be able to tradition of "natural" theorizing reaching back to the ancient Creeks,7'! For
accommodate the \'ast di\'ersity of cultures that ha\'e existed throughout his­ the time-frame of most analyses, howe\'er, these basic material factors can
tory means that they will ha\'e little bearing on our analysis.-~ be aSSllmed aW;1\' as rclati\'Cly insignificant. Bllt in stl\(lies that foens on the
The first ring rcfers to the lI'eh-{}(beliefs, or what I referred to earlier as IOllgue duree. they take 011 more importanec,~"
"social epistemology." '10 reiterate, it includes a historically contingent web Although the figure ma\' gi\'e the appearance of stasis, it is important to
of intersubjecti\'e values, beliefs, cognith'e biases, al\(I symbolic and linguis­ emphasize that ecological holism is fundamentally historicist in outlook,
tic forms into which a people are acculturated. This web-of-beliefs is not meaning that human existence is seen as a eontinuollsly evolving interplay
species-wide, but \'ariable from culture to culture or epoch to epoch. It forms between em'ironmental al\(I technological conditions, formal and informal
the broad epistemic lens through which a people interpret and act on the institutions and practices, and intersubjeetive values and beliefs. From this
world around them. The web-of-beliefs blends into the next ring, which is perspeeth'e, "rational ities," identities, nations, a nd states - though potentially
composed of formal and informal illstitutiolls, ranging from states and cor- stable in their basic contours O\'er relati\·eJy long periods of time-are none­
4° 11'\ T R 0 [) II C T ION Medium Theory 41

theless prodllcts of historical cOlltill~ellcies alld thlls sllbject to chan~e as tiomhip between changing modes of cOlmlllmieation and world order
nallnc alld socit'l\, cvoh-cs," transformation. Ihe focus itself should not be ettlwted with a kind of "master
It is also importallt to be clear that change from this perspecti\'e is not narrati\e~ to histor\' centered on connnunications,
the ullfoldin~ of predetermined pallerns, or teleological processes. but rather
"thc gralld aggrcgation and multiplication of the actions of indi\'idnals and
grollps ill COllcrete historical circumstances as these illdi\'idnals arc respolld­ Ecological JJolislll, l\lcdiulll Thcory, and Intcrnational

illg to a IIll1ltiplicity of biological, psychological and social needs.~~2 Thus Relations Theory

c1wnee or contillgeney play an important part in the natme and direction


of social ('\'()Intion. From an ecological holist perspecti\'e. eonceptnal. tech­ It shollid bc clear from the ()\'Cf\'icw that the tenor of IIIcdillm theory is
1I010gical. ccollomie, or other changes in human pallerns of interaetion can c1earl~' aligned with the "historical sociology" side of thc International Re­
alter the 1IIIIIIall de\'elopmental p;lth in ullexpected w;lys that de~\' more Iatiom ficld. as opposed to the more ahistorical approaches Robert Kcohane
linear notions of change. In this respect, ecological holism runs contrary to identifies as "rationalist:~- Robert Cox points olltthat rationalist :Ipproaches.
those theories that argue for the existence of recurring "Iong-cycles~ or pro­ which he calls "problem-soh-ing," arc suitable to "periods of apparent stability
gressi\'e "stages of de\'elopmen( throngh which all societies arc assumed to or fixity in power rclations,"~~ Surprisingly. these approaches represcnt the
passY It is informed by a "Darwinist" \'iew of history-that is. one that sees majority of the ficld today. C\Tn thon~h we appear to be in an cra of fnn­
no lmfolding logic to history, but only "descent with modification:~j damcntaltransformation, As Gellner renwrks: 'Thc great paradox of om agc
Of course, fUlldamental change in the basic structures of human society is that although it is undergoing social and intellectual change of totally
is not continuous but episodic gi\'Cn the relati\'e stability and endurance of unprecedented speed amI depth. its thought has become, ill the main, 1111­
human institutions. ideas, and habits, In Gaddis's words, "comlitions can historical or ahistorical."~"
persist for years with so little alteration that people come to accept them as The two dominant approaches in the field today-lleorcalislll and IICO­
pernl;llIelll."~' III the past, there was a tendency among some social theorists liberalism-are ahistoricalnot because the\' are ullable to ;JJnass "historical"
to look for a sillgle "master~ \'ariable that could be seen as dri\'ing all episodes details in support of their claims, but rather because they seck essentially to
of fU\l(hll1lental c1wnge, whether it be the mode of prodnction or teclmol­ escape histo~' b~' gronllding their thcories in fnndamelltal prcsnpposiliollS­
ogies of destrnction. But according to the ecological holist perspecti\'e ad­ be it the anarchic structure or the desire to maximize utilities-which are
\'anced here. the specific source of flmdamental change at anyone time in posited as Imi\'ersal (i,c,. timelcss, contextlcss) f01mdations."1J III Adlcr's ter­
hUll1an history c;nmot be stated 011 a priori grounds. amI typically reAects a minology. they are both exalllples of what he calls theorics of "being" - "a
multiplicity of factors- both material and ideal-that happen to cOl1\'erge pre\'alent notion that sees e\'e~-thing in nature and society as static and
in the form of a slldden transformation in hUll1an patterns of interaction.'6 mechanistic. inclnding change,""1 For neorealists espccially, the main com­
1\ Iediunl theory can be seen as a subsidiary approach embedded in an ponents of the inlcrllational s~'stem arc trcated as if "suspellded in space"­
ecological holist pcrspecti\'e, isolating those changes that arc encouraged "time has lillie to do with thelll, and 1II()\'elllcnt alld chan~c :JrC lincar. . , ,"'JZ
alld facilitated by a change in the 1I10de of comnllmieation, This focus E\'en those cyclical theorists like Robert Gilpin who appear 10 gi\'c a 1II0re
should not be taken as an assertion of the fundamental primacy of eom­ dynamic treatment to the interllational syslcm by allowing for differential
nllmications O\Tr other spheres of human existence, but merely a heuristic grO\\,th still present change as merely the rearrangement of ratiOlwlly moti­
di\'ision of scholarly labor. Technological changes in communications media vated "units" under the lIni\'ersal constant of a constraining anarchic order.'1l
are one among many other important innO\'ations that produce no\'elty in Likewise, neoliberalism offers what Wendt calls a "beha\'ioral conception of
social interaction, Yet because connl1lmieation-like production and secu­ both process and institutions: they change behavior but not identities and
rity- is so \'ita] to human existence, these changes will likely ha\'e far­ interests,~~ For all thcir apparent clifferences over the question of relati\'e
reaching implications. Thus while in this study I am focusing on the rela- \'erSllS absolute gains, neoliberals and neorealists are alike in assuming the
-F IN IKOIIl'C 110:'\ Medium Theory 43

natural order of world politics to be one of lmitarY rational actors in an \\hich are seen 1I0t in either/or terms. but as part of a single whole, Ecolog­
;Inarchic sCllin!;.''' ical holism takcs as its starting point the basic materialist posiliouthat hnman
The altem;lli\'e to thcories of beinE;, accordinE; to Adler, arc theories of beiugs, like all other orE;auisms, arc \'itally dependent on, amI thus inAu­
"becominE;" -tbose that sec human existence "as a perm;ment proccss of em'Cd by. the clI\'ironmcnt arollml them, Ilowc\'Cr, it recognizes Ibal he­
changc and cmlutiou, e\'euthat \\hich appears to bc static" -a category that camc humau beings h<l\'e the unique ahility to cOlllmunicate complex sym­
oln-iollSk inclndes ecologic<11 holism% There arc fc\\' cxamples of the type bols amI idcas. the~' do not approach their enviromnent on the basis of pure
of full-blown historicism elwracteristic of theorics of "becoming" in the In­ illstinct (as other organisllls do) nor as a linguistically naked "given," but
lernational Relations field, although that is changing, Increasingly. a I1Il1nber rather through a complex web-of-beliefs, symbolic forms, amI social con­
of scholars sec their work as fallillg outside of either the neorealist or nco­ structs inlo which the~' are acculturated and through which they perceive
libcral camps, amI what might be termed a "historicist" school of Interna­ the world around them, ;\s Lllke describes:
tional Relations theorists can be identified ill the field."- The COllmlOn de­
nominator of this school is a shared \·iew of human institl1tiolls and practices The \\a~'s in which people apprehend their environment is (prelfor­
(including states. natiolls, identities, aud illterests) as products of historical mubted b~' the statements abollt ideas, "reality," objects, facts, reb­
contingellcies amltbus sl1bjectto challge O\'Cltime, Ilistoricists sec politics tiol1S, ,md so forlh Ihat organize a parlicular field of referencc. The
not as a eyelical. rceurring phenomellon (as lIeorealists clearly do) but rather human subject in am' gi\'en historical era apprehends her or his world,
as ,m opell-cnded proccss, thc self. and thc ((.,lations betwcen sclf ami othcrs ou the basis of
II istoricists can be differeutiated ill terms of the relati\'C weight they pl<1ce historical discursi\'e practices that name. locate, and organize concrete
011 the "material" versus the "ideal" as expl<1n<1tory \ariables-a distinction and abstract knO\dedge and experience. 1111
that harkcns back to l\tmx ami I legcl respccti\'cly. For cxample. Robcrt Cox's
"historical stlllctures" approach. which explicitly articulates all opell-ellded There arc fc\\' examples of ecological holism in thc field today, though
e\'Olutionary theory that takes iuto account material ell\'ironmellts. institu­ Ruggie's work on historicaltransforrnation is a clear exception, In "'Ierrito­
tiolls. and illtcrsubjecti\'e \'alues alld beliefs, ultimatek falls toward the "ma­ rialih' amI Bemnd:' Ruggic states Ihe ecological holist position Ihat "material
teri;ll" end of the spectrum because of the O\'Crriding importance allached e11\·irolmlents. stralcgic beh;l\'ior, and social epistemology" arc "irreducible
to the mode of production as a determinant \'ariable."~ Likewise. Daniel to one another."'''' Other examples that arc perhaps less explicitly illustrativc
DCl1dncy's oll!;oing rcconstlllclion of materialist gcopolitical thcories­ inclndc the \\'ork of ElIIst Ilaas amI Emannel Adlcr, who share the view that
\\'hich explorcs thc relationship among broad envirollmental cOllditiolls. "politics is a historical process that changes with physical changcs amlthc
changing teclmologies of destruction, and world order formation-also falls e\'Olution of meanings,"'''' In their empirical \\'ork. both Haas and Adler have
toward the "malcrial" end because of the weight gi\'C1I to military teelmol­ focused on a more narro\\' time-frame in which "physical changes" can be
ogies.'N 'Iuward the "ideas" end of the spectrum fall the social constructi\'ist treated as a "gi\'en" for the purposes of analysis. Thus Adler's work on "epi­
theories of \\'elldt. Kratochwil, and others, which foclls 011 the historical stemic con1l11l1nities" bears a strong resemblance to the social constructivism
mallcability of interests, idelltities. ami illStitlltiollS,I'" These approaches tend of \Vcndt amI Kr,ltoch\\'i1-the major difference being the laller arc not
to cOllcentrate purely on the interaction between social epistemology and explicit about the extent to which material, geophysical factors are part of
institutiolls to the cxclusion of em'iromllerltal or teclmologiGll factors. They their onlolog\'.'''~ Of course, the differences bctwecn ecological holism and
lack the "grounding" of the more materially encompassing theories outlined social constructi\ism are minimal compared to their similarities, especially
abo\'e, and tend to downplay or ignore material factors as causally significant in contrast to mainstream rationalist approaches, which treat interests and
\',uiab1cs in politics. identities as relati\'ely fixed. Howe\'er, ecological holism provides a more
As shown in Figure Z, ecological holism can be seen as an attempt to eomprehensi\'e picture of human existence, one that is vital for an exami­
O\'erC01l1e this binary opposition between "materiar factors and "ideas: nation of the type of large-scale historical changes undertakcn here.
[:'<TROIJUCTION
-H

On l\ fcthodolog;~'

(1)\iOllSly, thc \Trsion of mcdium thcory I ha\'c put forward is incom­


latihlc with a positi\'ist methodology, t-.lost important. thc cmphasis on his­
Part 1
oricity and radical contingcncy in social evolution c1ashcs with thc idea of
,\\ ~ standing apart frolll history. and I11IIs. hy cxfcmioll, thc mc of thc Printing and the Medieval to Modern
Icducti\'c-nomological or co\'ering-Iaw model of inquiry. But the cO\'Cring­
,1W model is not the only available mcthodology for thc typc of alia lysis in
World Order Transformation
I'hicll I am cngaged in this study. III rccent years. theorists have begun to
'xplore the use of historicalnarratire as a mode of explanation. 'o ; This modc
ccks to lillk occurrcnccs along a temporal dimcnsion. tracing thc \',Hiahlcs
Ind cOlltingcncics that wcre important in taking thc cmlutionary path down
me road as opposed to anothcr. Of course, narrati\'c explallations arc not
onfincd to hUlllan pcrsonalitics or what has oftcn bccn callcd disparagingl~'
hc "history of e\Tnts." As Donald Polkil1!;horne put it, "thc narrati\'e scheme
'rganil-cs thc illdi\'idllal e\'cnts it ,Iddrcsses using a framcwork of human
lurpOSCS and dcsircs. including the limits and opportunities posed by the
Ihysical, cultural. and pcrsonal em'ironments,"'0<1 Nor, do historical narra­
i\'cs prccludc c1car analytical schemcs or logical protocols to incrcasc thc
'crisimilitllllc of thcir accounts. Thc usc of cOllllterfactuals is crucial to this
nodc of explanation. as are structurcd. focused comparisons.lo~ So in the
lagcs to follow, my argumcnts cstahlishing thc importance of changing
nodcs of comnllllliGltion will rely lIot just 011 as much cmpirical c\'idcncc
IS can he gleancd from primary and secondary sources. but on logical ar­
;lImcnts as wcll, pointillg to "what might ha\'c been" had thcre bcen no
'h,lIlge in the comnllmications environment a't all. 1\Iost important. though.
n looking to the past in a structured, focused way, I ha\'e also constructed
m analytical Icns through which to interprct changcs that arc occurring
oday. In thc long run. it is the relati\'e utility of thc latter that willultimatcly
JrO\'e to be thc most important measure of this study,
III.
~IFf)IF\'AI. TO ~IOf)FR:-J

had riscn to 23(>.111 By thc sixteenth century. Il'cstcrn Europe had entered ;]
ncll' conlll1lmications clll'iromncnt at thc ccnter of which Irere cheap, Illass­
prodnced prillted documents emanating frolll the many printing presses
Print and the 1Vledievcl1 to
sf retched across tl,e land,
3 l'vIodem \Vorld Order Transformation:
In this chapter, I have traced the de\'elopl1lent of cOJ11I11I1I1ication teeh­
nologics tlrrough the fI.·fiddle Ages leading up to the illl'ention of the printing Distributional Changes
press in the mid-fiftccnth century I hal'e argued tlrat tire rise of the Church
in the early Middle Ages Was contingent on the comnll1l1ications elll'iron­
mellt of the timc, Its spiritual attachment to litemcy alld the reproduction
of the writtcn word, its usc of parduncnt as a medium of con1l11unic'ltion.
and tire specific material and ecologicll circn11lstances of wcstem European
all helped prodnce a hospitable elll'ironlJJent for the Church's rise to he­
gemony in thc fl.fiddlc Ages, \Vhilc thc Roman Catholic Clrurch had main­
taincd a monopoly OI'er Initten comlllunications "p to the twelfth eentu~',
frOIII that point onward a gradual change in the con1l11l11lications el1\'iron­
ment hegan to occur, as evidenced hy the growth of secular literacy and the Changes in the mode of cOIllmunic,ltion hare far-reaching,
usc and reproduction of written documents outside of the formal papal­ fundamelltal illlplicatiollS for the social amI political infrastructure of an era
monastic network, In this respect. the illl'ention of printing actually rcpre­ and for the trajector~' of social emlntiol\. In chapter J I outlined two COll­
sents the culmination of slowly accllmulating social pressures. In other eeptuall~' distinct effects that arise from a change in the mode of commu­
words. the jlll'ention of printing was not a sudden "out-of-nowhere" del'c1­ nication: di~tribution,11 ch~lllges and changes to soci,t1 epistemology. III this
0plnent. hnt was <In outgrowth of cOll\'erging social prcssures for more effi­ chapter. I concentralc onl~' on the forlller.
cient conlll1t11licatiollS, In conjunction with the hro,lder social and eco­ Distriblltional changes arc changes in the relatil'e power of social forces
nomic conditions of the time. howel'er, once printing began to spread as a consetjuence of the change in the mode of conllllunication, Because
throngh \Vestern Emope. it remlntionized the COIlllllllllications elll'iron­ modes of COllllllllllication translllit amI .store infortniltion in uniqllc ways,
mellt with significant consequences for society and politics, In the next t\\'o social forces whose illtercsts match a cOllllnunicatiollS ellviromnent will be
chapters. I examine tIle ways in which the emergence of this ne\\' coml11U­ fal'ored while those whose interests do not will be placed at a disadvantage.
nications em'ironment played a part in the transforJnation of the lnediel'al Social forces sun'ile differentia"~'. in other Ilurds. according to thcir "fitness"
world order. with the nell' media elll'iron1l1ent- a process that is both open-ended amI
cOlltillgent. Thus. medinm theor~' offers ncither all expl;lllation of the gen­
esis of particular social forces. nor why they were animated hy partieuhH
interests ,IS opposed to others, Its purposc is to explaill why those forces
flourished or withered at a particular historical juncture.
Distributional changes undercut some social forces while they advance
the interests of othcrs, III this chapter. I examine the way distributional
changes associated with the del'e1opment of printing played a part in the
rnediel'al-to-1l10dern l\'Orld order transformation in Europe. I begin by ex­
amining the way the change in the mode of comlllunication helped to
(I,.., "/
~ILI)fI-:""L TO ;\IOIJER:'>: Distributional Cilalllje5

disso,,"e the architecture of political authority in the late I\liddle Ages. Spe­ "other-world"''' and 1\10re corrnpt. cspecially ,IS succcssive popcs eng;lged in
cificall~'. I ('\pJore the ,,'ar two social forces. the Prot{'~tant Reformation and or suc('\n1J!>ed 10 pOl\cr_politicallllachinations-an il1la~e dOl1hly reil1forccd
scientific humanism. were famred by the new media em-ironment to the by events such as the Great Schislll,1 This declinc in Church popularity is
disa<hantage of the Roman Catholic Church, I then examine the way trallS­ reReeted in the wa~' nWIIY Christians saw thc "Black Death" plague Ihal
fortn,llions in socioeconomic relatiollS that were elICorrraged h~' tIle change swept through western buope ill the fourteenth centmy as a symbol of God's
in the mode of eOllllllunication helped to undermine the basis of feudal dissatisfaction with the corruption of the Church.!
socia I relal ions and pa"e the way for I110dern contractua I socioeconolll ic Prior to the elncrgcncc of printing. thc Cllllfch had hecn relatively SIlt'­
relations among an increasingly important segl11cnt of the late lnedie"al cessful in sqnelching and cont,lining heresies prim,uily "hecausc it always
population: the urban bourgeoisie, This particular distributional change had had better interllallines of cOlllnlllllicatioJl than its challcngers."1 Those that
what I,'e lIlight call a "Ievcling" effect on patterns of political and economic were not stamped out )n' "iolcnce, or compelle in/rare, were more than likelr
ohJi~ati(ln. at least in rrrb,1Il ,1reas, clltting throllgh the elltallgled wehs of to be coopted bv a fonn of special privilege or to be ignored altogether, as
personallm'alties characteristic of the feudal era and opening up the possi­ various heresies Riekered amI then faded without nleans of llIass connllll­
hility for COllllnon rule fro1ll a single center. Finalh-, I turn to the wa~' the nication,; Febne amI i\ Iarlin wonder "wlwt lIIight have happelled if somc
change in the 1Il0de of c0I11111unieation famred the rise of modern state of the e,ulier heresies (the Ilussite, for example) had the power of the press
bmeaucracies and centralized political authority throughout parts of western at their disposal-power th,lt Luther and Cah'in used with great skill, first
Europe, As Inan)" ha"e pointed out, the cOI1\'erging interests of the latter two in the attack Oil gome ,md then in tIle diffnsion of their new doctrines."A
social forces-the urban bourgeoisie and centralizing state monarchies­ The Inquisition. established ill the thirteenth century, was a reRection of
were erncial in molding the architecture of Illodern world order in Europe. both the growing heretical clements within society and the Churcll's more
stringcnt reprisals agaimt thclll.- It rel\1ained an effective countermeasme
so long as the doclrilles Rowing from heretical movements could be halted
by taking l\1easures against the persons upon whol\1 the widespread trans­
Thc Ncw' 1\ledia Environment and the Dissolution of the
mission of such doctrines dcpended, \Vith the rapid dissemination amI pub­
)\'Icdic\'al Ordcr lication afforded )\' prillting, howe,·er. heretical 1\100'emCllts had a mnch
better chance of spreading thcir message heyond the locality in which they
'llle Protesta1lt Refonllatioll emerged. making it llIuch more difficult for the Church to take effective
As outlined at the end of the previom chapter, by the fourteenth and COulltcnneasmes,
fifteenth centuries strong social forces were emerging with nO"el agendas To illustrate tile way tecllllOlogical il1nO\'ations have unintended cOl1Se­
amI interests that were pllShing at the margins of the Church's hegemony quences, amI how fathoming sl1eh conseql1enees are difficult for those living
0'"('[ kllowledge reproduction, SOl11e of these social forces can be character­
through thelll, it is interesting to note that the ChllTch was initially enthu­
ized as reactionary nl0,"<'ments within the Church itself. In this category. "'e siastic ahout the prillting prcss, making thorollgh lise of it, for exaillple, ill
would inclnde the ,'ariollS religious "heresies" tllat periodically and sponta­ its anli-Turkish crusade,' One particular cardinal. Nicholas ofCusa, referred
neousl~' surfaced throughout western Europe beginning in the twelfth cen­ to the printing press as a "di"ine art" hecause of the "'ay that the technology
tury, Although their specific goals and ideologies '"<Hied eonsiderabl~'. these would enable poor priests who would otherwise be unable 10 ;lfford Bibles
heretical movements arose during the High I\Iiddle Ages mostly in reaction to ha\'e access to cheaper, mass-produced \'ersions.'1 And it is somewhat
to the Church hierarchy, which, as pointed out in the pre"iolls chapter, was ironic that the first dated printed product from Gutenberg's \\'orhhop was
assullling a more legalistic and secular face distanced from the popular de­ an indulgence-the ,'e~' emblem of Church corruption in the eres of the
\"ation tl1<1t marked its appeal during its embryonic da~'s as a missionary sect.' Protestant Reformation,I" In fact. the demand for printed books and liturgies
The tophea,y adlllinistrati,'e organs of the Papal gm'ernment appeared less among Catholic churchmen drove the initial establishment of printing
,IEIlIE\'"'' TO ;\IOIJER:" Distributional Changes 71

presses throughout Europe in the latter half of the fifteenth century. Some \\'ithin fifteen days Lnther's theses had heell translated into Ccrmall, snm­
of the Iargcst IIIOII;lslcries. like CIIlIlY amI Citeaux OIl Dijoll. illvited prillters malized, alld disl'ilJlllul tOl'\TIY part of thc cOIIIII,y,'" Durillg Llllhcr's lifc,
from Gernlan~' to set up printing workshops alld to teach monks the art of fi\T times as mam' works authored h~' Luther alone were pllhlished than by
printillg. rI Thc early printers thrived 011 commissiolls from nlOll<lsteries ami all the C,ltholic contrO\Trsialists pnt together. 1'1 Martin I,lither alolle was
cathcdrals for Latill hihles, missals, psalters. alld antiphlln;uies.'~ In one of respollSihlc for 20 percent of thc approximately 10.000 pamphlet editions
the first hooks prillted by the Brothers of the Common Life in Rostoek there issued from presses in Cerman-spcakin~ territories hetwcen 1500 amI I qO,2o
appeared the dedication that printing was the "handmaid of the Church."" Illitially. the \'(llllllle increased dramatic<llIy, with Luther's published output
Onl~' hilldsi~ht could tell them how wrong they were. rising frolll 87 prilltings in 1518 to a high of 390 printillgs in 1523. 21 As
lt is well known among historians and laypersons alike that the prillting Andermn put it, "In effect. Luther hecame the first hest-selling author so
press was closely intertwined with the Protestant Reformation. What is often kIlOlI'll::: And of course the rise ill output was not restrieted to that eU1<1­
confused is the specific causal relationship hetween the two. with techllo­ nating frolll I.uther alollc; from 1517-1518- thc first year of the Rcfornw­
logical determinists often attributing to the printing press the gellesis of the lion-there was a 530 percellt increase in the production of pamphlcts is­
Protestant Reformation itself. H Ilowe\·er. prior to print there were m,lIly sued frolll Gerlll;1ll spcaking presses.:' Prior the emergence of the printing
other similar outbreaks of heresies. which clearly mitigates any simplistic em'irolunent, heresies simi\;H in form to the Protcstallt Reforl.uation could
one-to-{)ne connection. And certainlv the outbreak of the Protestant Refor­ not count on such a quick ignition rate,
mation cannot he explained without reference to the deterioratillg ecollomic There were other W;lyS ill which the printillg ellvironmellt matched the
and social conditions of central and northern Europe. which created an interests of the Protestallt Reformation. Printing permitted the mass produc­
oppressive and intolerable environment for many. J; As Luke describes. "Be­ tion of small. cheap pamph lets that favored the Reformer's strategic interest
fore Luther became a figure of public and political interest in 1517. German both in rapid disseminatioll of propaganda. in the form of cheap placards
hurghers and peasants. artisans and merchants. and many humanist academ­ and posters, and the concealment of heretical printed works from authorities
ics shared a feeling of unrest and dissatisfaction with existing social. eco­ by both producers amI consumers. Pamphlets were produced in quarto for­
nomic, and political-religious conditions. amI were ready for a change to­ mat-that is, made up of sheets folded twice to make four leaves or cight
wards what for them promised to he a more just ami Christian society."'" pages-and withont a hard eO\·er. amI were referred to by the Gcrm<ln term
What could be said with confidence is that prillting had a remlutionary Flugscflrifiell. or "fl~'ing \Hitings."'~ Edwards describes how the pamphlets
effect 011 Ihe cxtent to which one particular heresy could spread widely and were "easily tramported b~' itinerant pcddlers. hawkcd on slreet comers <lnd
rapidly with devastating consequences for the Church's containment strat­ in ta\'erns. ad\'ertised with jingles amI intriguing title pages, amI swiftly hid­
egies. In other words, the properties of the printing eln-ironment favored the den in a pack or under elothing when the authorities made an appearance,"2;
interests of the Protestant Reformation to the disadvantage of the Papal hi­ Edwards goes on to explain how the pamphlets were "ideal for circulating
erareh\·. a sub\'ersi\T message right under the noses of the opponents of reform,"'" As
Ilow did the Protestant Reformation "fif the printing environment? T\lost the pamphlets did not rcqllire <I I;uge im'estmcnt in eithcr 111,l11pO\\'Cr or
re\"(llutionary was the way that printing afforded an opportunity for one per­ material as did large manuscripts, they \\'ere inexpensive to produce amI
son to reach a mass audience in an unpreeedentedly short period of time. could be turned out quickly to respond illlmediately to the day-to-day battles
In 1517, the German theologian Martin Luther puhlicized 95 theses in of the ongoing religions polel11icsY Although precise estimates arc difficult
Latin criticizing a \'ariety of Church practices. centering mostly on the rise to determine. historian Hans-Joachim Kohler figures that the a\'erage [lug­
in tithes, indulgences, and benefices. As Dudley notes: "A century earlier, schriftel1 cost about as Illuch as a hen. or a kilogram of beef-certainly not
the issue might ha\'e smoldered for years before breaking into flame. E\'en insignificant. but well within the reach of the pamphlet's intended audience,
then, its effects would have been purely local, as in the case of the followers the "common man," and much less expensi\'e than the cost of a well-crafted
of John Huss whose revolt (1419-1436) had been confined to Bohemia."17 parchment manuscript.'s
-, d
,- MEDIE\'AL TO MODER~ Distributional Changes

as "nenc centers." \\'e shonld not nm!erestimate, therefore, the extent to


'Ii> reach a wider, mass audience the pamphlets and other publications
were printed in the vernacular-the form ibelf a direct clwl1cnge to the which the illiterate cOllld h;l\T acc('ss to the printed \\"lmlthrongh those that
Chmch hierarchy whose power rested on performing an intermediary func­ could read. So \\·hile the Reformation was \TrY much an owl process at a
mass Ie\el. it \\'as the \';lSt distribntion of printed material that fneled the
tion belween the \'emacular and sacred Lltin scripts. As Edwards points Ollt.
process at the erItci;11 elite 1e\c1.'- 1\ loreo"er. Prolcstantisnl deliberately in­
printing not only helped spread Luther's message, it "enlbodied" it in its \'e~'
form I1\" presenting challenges to doelrine in the \'emacnlar press. 1Q I.nther's culcated in its followers the importance of literacy and Bible reading, ami
as ;1 ('omeqllenee litcr;lC~ rates I;rew markedh' higher O\cr tinn: ill Prolestant
explicit ainl was to Pllt a Bible in e\erv honsehold-an aim tl1<1t W;lS func­
tionally complemented by the standardization ami mass production afforded versus Catholic regions."
While the printing el1\ironment ma~' have f'l\"ored the strategic interests
b~' movable type. One printer alone, Hans Lufft, issued 100.000 copies of
the Bible within forty years between 15H and 1574. '0 Fehne am] i\lartin of Protestantism, it worked against those of the Roman Catholic Chmeh.
Gi\"Cn its exploitation of the printing press, Protestantism was able to take
cstimate tl1;1t about one million German Bibles were prinlcd before mid­
the eark offemi\c in the polemiC<11 stmgg1cs, with ROl\le oftell being forced
cenhl~•. '1 In so doing. printing helped to nndermine the legitimacy of cen­
to take the some\dwt desperalc amI futile position of opposing alld contaill­
tralized knowledge reproduction by providing the means "by which each
ing prillt ill the name of doclrine. ,\mlerson affirms that the reformers were
person conld becol\le his or her own theologian."'1 John Ilobbes \note dis­
"always fundamentall~' on the offensi\e. precisely because l they] knew how
apprO\'ingly how "e\"C~' man, nay. every boy and wench that could read
to m;lke IISC of the expalldinE; \TIII<lClllar print-nwrket being created by cap­
English thought they spoke with Cod AIllligh~', ami understood what lie
said."H italism, while the Connter-Reform,ltion defemled the citadel of I,at;n:""
Thlls it \\as Ronle which felt the need to formnlate the Index l,i!Jrorll1ll
Fueled by the new means of comnlllllieation, the Protestant Reformation
reached a level of mass support lmprecedented among prior heresies in Prolrihilorllm of banned prinlcd 1I1<1lcria1.'" I\S Eisenstein notes:
Europe dming the f\liddle Ages. A "colossal religious propaganda war" en­
Catholic policies framed at Trent were aimed at holding these new
sned. in Anderson's words, that would soon envelop the whole of Emope.'"'
functions in check. By reiecling \'erIWC11lar \TrsioTls of the Bible, by
1\tthe heart of this war were the cheap, mass-prodnced pamph lets emanating
stressing la\· obedience and imposing restrictions on lay reading. by
from the many printing presses that sprouted throughout Emope in response
de\Tloping new maehinel\' such ,lS the Index and Imprimatur to chan­
to the markel created by the religious upheaval. The pamphleteers carefull~'
nel the (low of likratme along narrowly prescribed lines. the post­
enlployed a combination of text and illustration to reach as wide an audience
Tridentine papae\' prO\n) to be an\"lhing but aecomlllodating. It as­
as possible. Devastating, "blasphemous" caricatures im'ariably featming per­
sumed ,m unyielding post me that gre\\' e\Tlmore rigid over the course
Icrse and disfigured representations of eminent Church officials rolled off
the printing press in dro\'es-an often neglected historical delail of the of time.""
si\teenth-eentu~' religious propaganda wars made possible b~' the printing
The Index. continuollsly npdalcd throllgllOllt the sixteenth eentmy and
press. lI
beyond. had the ironic effect of spmring a markct for the printed material
Bllt, a skeptic might ask, what about the low literac~' rates in early modern
contained therein by makillg it appc;lI taboo. ami thus e\'enlllore allraeti\"C ."'1
Emope;> How much weight should we gh'e to the printing press when the
Even prior to the Protestant Reformation the Church had issued decrees
clbility to read am] \nite was still out of reach for the vast majority of people?
forbidding the printing of books unauthorized by the Papal hierarchy. In
\lthough literacy was still relativelv low among most of the lower classes,
1515 Pope Leo X issued an edict to the Holy Roman Empire "that no license
the spread of the printed word worked in tandem with traditional means of
should be gi\'en for the printing of a book until it had been examined and
'>ral communications in what Kohler calls a "two-step" communications pro­
apprO\'ed by an authorized representati\'e of the Chureh."",1 By restricting
:ess.'~ Evangelical preachers spread by word of mouth polemical works
the publication of unauthorized printed lnaterial ill this way. hO\\c\Tr, the
rreshly issued and/or smuggled in from the I\lany printing houses that served
7'f \11': 1111': \',,1. TO \I01ll-: H:\ Distributiollal Challges 7,

Chmch's strictmcs crcatcd a lar£;c black-market book tradc fcd bv printing Sc;cntific HrJIIHl/I;SIII
prcsscs houscd in nOll-Catholic rc£;ions. H It also rcsulted in slron~ prcssmcs
from Catholic printers who were placed at a severe disalhantage Iw not being ;\5 ;\nderson and others point out. the early printers represented one of

;lhlc to cnter into the newly elncrging market for printed malcrial-espe­ thc first manifestations in Europe of groups of commercial entreprenems
cialh· thc m,llcrial forhidden hy the Chmch. For example, in 1;24 the prin­ dedicated to making a profit. 4' COl1Sequently, they were primarily concemed
ters of Leipzig petitioned their Catholic duke that they \\'ere in danger of \\'ith finding markets for their hooks amI printed materials. Once the market
losing "house, home, ami all their li\'ClillOod" bccause they were not allO\\Td for religious pamphlets hecame satmated, hooksellers needed to find alter­
to "print or sell ,1I1ything new that is nwde in \\'illcnhcrg or else\\'here. For nati\'e outlets for their products. One particular emerging social group yeam­
that which one would gladly sell and for which there is demand: they said, ing for mass-produced printed material at the time was the scientific hu­
referring to the Protestant liter<1lme, "they arc not ,IIIO\\Td to ha\'e or sell. manist mO\ement. O\'Cr the eomse of the first centmy of printing, a shift
But \\'h;lt thc\' h;l\'C in ahundance," referring to Catholic lilcratmc, "is de­ occmrcd in the conlcnt froln primarily I.atin-based rcli~ious themcs to sci­
sircd hy no one amI cannot be gi\'en away."4' In short. the Church's strategic entific hnmanist works \\'rillen in \'Cmacular languages. 4'1 Like the expansion
intercsts clashed \\'ith the propertics of the newly emerging eonn11lmicatiol1S of Protes!;1I1tism, thc growth of scientific humanism helped to undermine
cl1\'i rollment. the anthoritv of the Roman Catholic Chmch by direetly c1wllenging the
The way these religious divisions spilled O\'er into the secular parts of the cosmology upon which its authority rested. And also like Protestant groups,
Christian Commonwe,llth is well-known. Their imp,lct on the architectme social forces in famr of scientific Inmwnism nomished in the newly emerg­
of medieval world order-in particular. the transnational hegemony of the ing communications em·ironment.
Rom,m Catholic Church -was dC\.1st'lting. Soon much of Emope was di­ Althongh modemist histories of science have tended to portray the emer­
\'idcd into competing religious territories-,I chasm that initially corre­ genlT of the so-called "Scientific Remlution" as a sharp historical jnnctme
sponded with pro- and anti-print factions. As Anderson explains, "nothing \\'hen the fellers of religious false consciousness were thrown aside for the
gives a beller sel1Se of this siege mentality th,1I1 Fran~'ois l's panicked 1;3; wisdom of pme empiricism hya few path-breaking individuals, the roots of
h;m on thc printing of anr hooks in his realm-on p,lin of death hy hang­ scientific humanism as a social force can achwlh- be traced back to the late
ing."46 The Protestant Reformation ripped into the increasingly tenuous cos­ ~liddle ;\ges.''' In Ital~' and in northern Emope, the growth of universities,
mological bind that held Christendomtogclher under;1 single society. While coupled \\'ith a more hospitable mban setting, furnished the grounds for a
it is cert;linh- truc that the roots of the Protestant Reformation reach back stin1l1Iati1H; intellectual e1l\'ironment characterized by intense debates sm­
hefore the lle\'e1opment of printing, it is unlikely that it would ha\e been as rounding the rediscO\'er~' of classical Greek and Roman texts.;) At the same
profoundly consequential in this regard without the change in the com­ time, latent in European society \\'as a grO\\'ing dissatisfaction with the pre­
munications environment. One need only look at the fate of pre\'ious her­ vailing cosmology for more practical, secular reasons. The Ptolemaic, earth­
esies, like the Hussite, that withered \\'ithout the a\'ailability of printing, centered picture of the uni\'erse, supported hy official Chmch doctrine, 110
Printing helped to displace "the mediating and intercessionar)' role of the longer seemed adequate, for example, to the imperatives of ocean na\'iga­
e1ergv, and C\Tn of the Chmeh itself, by prO\'iding a ne\\' channel of com­ tion. which \\'as assuming a more important place as connnerce and trade
nllmication linking Christians to their God." r In conjunction with indi\'id­ expanded. Nor could it be easily squared \\'ith observations of the heavens
ualistic push of Protestant ideology, printing weakened the intermediary made with the aid of ne\\' technical discO\uies - foremost among them the
function that had huttressed the privileged social position assumed by the telescope -that furthered skepticism about its core assumptions.'" Prior to
e1ergy. While Protestantism presented a frontal assault on the religious core printing, beliefs that contradicted the official Church cosmology could he
of the official Church cosmology, a second discernihle social force was grad­ contained with relati\'e success through the same hasic mechanisms, such
ually underculling it from a more holistic perspecti\e. as the Inquisition, that held other religious heresies in check. After printing,
"~(I
;\11'.1111" \ ,\1. I () ;\IOIlI-.IC', UlslnhullOllal Changes 77

11Il\\e\'(~r, it hccallle much more difficult for thc Church to halt the flow of incolIgruollS imal;cs had to hc dllplicated in sufficicnt quantities to be
'hc n{'\\' scicllcc. cspcci;lll~' since sciclllific 11I1IIIallism (like Protesiantisllll hrollght into contlet. cOlllpared, alld cotllraslcd."
Iwd a strategic illterest in the widespread disseminatioll of knowledge and
illforlllation-all illtcrest that overlapped with that of tlte new printing in­ ThllS it was not III1COllllllon to find, as Febnc allll l\,lartin poillt ont,
dllSll\, Illany cxamples of prin!cd IIIa!crial that furthcred Inedie\'a\. PtolcJnaie lhe­
'(il ullderstallllthe "fitlless" between scientific hUlllallislTl alllithe print­ ories attlte same timc as the lIew scicnces. ;(, But what was revolutioll<Jry was
illg cllvirolllllCllt, we lIeed to look hack prior to the ill\'l'ntion of prillting: tltc cOlljullction of a ncw ill!cllcctual mind-sci alollgside thc slldden a III I
to the est,lhlishment of nni\'ersities in the High i\liddle Ages. As outlilled dramatic increase in the sheer \'(Ilume of circulating works. COlltradictions
ill the pre\'ious chapter, the swe II iIIg lIum bers of students and professors became morc difficlllt to reconcile once Arabists were set alongside Ga­
in the I ligh to lall' l\liddle Ages created a markct for hooks that spurred lenists or .\ristotelialls al;aimtl'tolcmaists ill cI sillgle .slud)'.;­
on the development of "in-house" uni\'Crsity m,lIl11script eop\'ing ccnters There were other \\'a~'s, beyond benefiting from the sheer \'olullle of cir­
that \\cre not formally tied to the monastic network. This market might ha\'e elll<lting materia\. in which scientific hUlllanism fit the printillg environ­
relllained limited, howcver, were it not for the introductiOlI of a new sci­ ment. Consider. in this rcspecl.ltow innO\'atiollS new to print-such as cross­
encc - animatcd mostly by redisc()\'Cred Aristotelian works - that gradually referencing and illllexing - functionally IIIa!ched an intellectnal interest in
refocused intellectual energy on "obsel"\'ation" and critical comparison of the s\stematie comparison allll critical e\'aluation of kllowledge that char­
obsen'ations as opposed to pure reAection on traditional wisdom that char­ acterized the ncw science." The printing environment favored the espril de
acterized the predominant neoplatonism of the day. q Although the new srsleme of the age-the desire to catalogue and organize every topic into a
"empiricists" propagated the myth that they were "turtling away" from the eOllSistent order- b~' permitting the usc of new devices like pagination, sec­
dnsty parchment books of the Church Fathers to "pure" examinations of the tion hreaks, rtlnning headers, title pages, index cards, standardized copies,
"Book of Nature:' we should cautiousl~' amid treating tlte myth, as Eisenstein and so forth, that would he \'irhwlly impossihle (or at least very difficnlt) 10
suggests, as anything more than a metaphor for the break from religious undertake without mechanized reprodnction.;'1
ties. q In facl. the printing press significantly fueled the sudden Wa\'e of ~Iore suhtle forms of "fitness" can he found as well. Comider the w,ly
scientific illnO\'ation that characterized the sixteellth ami seventeenth cen­ the new sciences' stress on detached anah-tical, "impersonal" moues of re­
hlries by facilitating the rapid dissemination alld exchange of knowledge and Aection a III I reasoning henehted hv thc mo\'(' away from the oraltr<1llSmis­
ideas. Contrary to myths, the new science was eriticalh- dependent on the sion of ideas, to illlli\'idnalized stuch- of standardized texts.("' Or cOllSider the
printed word. way the idea of progress ,md clmlulation of knowledge was encouraged hy
While it is true that the entire printed output contained as much chaff the duplicati\T powers of printing, by the sudden increase in the volume of
as wheat (early modern counterparts to the "trash" tele\'ision of today) the circulated material, and by the wav cross-referencing and indexing could
sheer \'()Iume of printed material that could be accessed b~' a single individ­ facilitate the "building" and s\nthesizing of existing theories. Multiple re­
u;II, or groups working cooperatively on a single project, was truly re\'olu­ prints and IlInllbered editiollS made possihle a process of critical feedhack
Iionary, especially as it converged with the interests of the new scientific whereby errors and omissions in an original text could be identified allll
curiosity. Eisenstein argues that while: corrected in subsequent editions.~1 By contrast, manuscript deterioration was
a constant problem in medie\'al Europe such Ihat enormous energy was
the duplication in print of extant scribal maps and ancient geograph­ channeled into the presen'ation and recopying of important texts while
ical treatises, even while seeming to prO\'ide e\'idence of "backsliding," countless others were allowed to drift into obli\·ion. Lack of standardization,
also provided a basis for unprecedented advance.... Before the out­ localized chronologies, imprecise cataloguing, and oral transmissions can
lines of a comprehensive and uniform world picture could emerge, all be seen as further constraints on the idea of progress and the eU111ulation
7;') ~I E III Jo: L\ " I () M () Ill'; R:'oj Distributional Changes 79

of knOldedge. \\'ith printing. hm\"(',·er. preseryation became lIIuch less of a centres of Icarning in the laler Iniddle ages also weukened its grip OIl
Clll1(TrJl sillcc nllllliplc copies cOllld he- made al diminishinl,; cmls. AIHllhc Ihe conlcnt of elite culll1le.'·'
e-xchan~e and circnlation of standardized texts fm'ored the notion of a pro­
gressi"e acellll1l1lation of ever more accurate ideas. Rice elaborates: \\'hile the Roman Catholic Church worked frantically to control the new
mode of conlllllmication IIHollgh ce11Sorship and patronage, it was mwhlc
Printing ga"e scholars all m'er Europe identical texts to work on. Re­ to slem Ihe tide of unforeseen consequellces that wcre ushered in with the
ferring precisely 10 a particular word in a particular line OIl a p,Jrticular inlroduction ofprinling-a tccl1l10IlJg" il had itselfinitiallyapplamled. With
page-, a scholar in Basel could propose an ell1endation which cOllid the de,-clop1l1cnl of printing, the Chl1lch's dOll1inant place in l1lcdieval
be Ii1pidl~' checked by his colleagues in Rome or Florence. From such world order collapsed. The remainder of Ihis chapter ex,lI11ines the way thc
correetions and discoveries a critical edition would emerge, to he su­ new Inode of con1l11unicalion f,lcilit<ltcd Ille rise of soci,11 furces that helpcd
perse-ded hy anolher aIHI yet another until something ,Ipproaching a conslilllle the n1Odell1 world order.
standard text had been achieved. h2

The idea that civilization was progressing away frolll error through the The Nc\y i'dedi;l Em'ironmcnt ;lnd the Constitution of the
winnowing away of false or distorted theories "fits~ a eommlnlications em'i­ i\ lodern Order
ronment where printed material (if not "knowledge ~ per se) was dsihly amI
quite literally accumulatillg. 6l Two social forces "hose interests converged were critical in the consti­
Like the Reformation, the secularization of knowledge and learning that tution uf the modem world urder in Europe. One was the emergence uf an
e11Sued worked ag,linst Rome's controlled interpretation of Ihe order of urbcl1/ bourgeoisie conllnilled to conlmercial exchange, contractllal sucio­
things, gradually m'erturning the medieval cosmolo~' upon which Papal economic relations, and capitalist entrepreneurship. The emergence of this
authori'" deri"ed ils legitimacy. The new communications environment "fa­ particular social force hud wlwl we nlight call a "levcliug" effcct on the
mre-d~ Ihe- inlerests oflhese two social forces to the disa(h'anlage of the papal­ talll,;led parliclIlarisllls of fcnclal social relations, opcning up the possihility
monastic information network. As shown in the pre"ious chapter, this net­ of comnlOn rule from a single center. The IIlere pussibility might have re­
work was critical in nwintaining the Church's transnational hegemon~' O\'er mained um!e"e1opcd \\'cre it not for the ",tlues that animated this ncw class
mnch of we-stem I':urope and t1ll1S of the ideological foundation of the me­ of cntreprenel1ls. \\'lto shared a eollccli"e interest in somc fonn of ccntrali/.cd
clieval world order. Working in tandem with .the ideas and interests of the rule to satis~' the need for both securi~' and standardization. Cuincidentally,
Protestant Reformation and scientific humanism, printing helped to under­ their interests "'ere met b~' centralizing state monarchs, who were willing to
2ut the intermediary and privileged function of the c1er~' in medie"al so­ pro"ide ratiunalized, bureallcmtic administration of internal affairs in ex­
~ie~·. opening up the reproduction of knowledge to commercial, secular change for financing from the urban hourgcoisie to fight extell1al wars. In
IHinters "'hose main concern was nut the dissemination of a particular re­ this ,,·ay. centralized state bureaucracies-a prilnary feature uf modem \\'orld
Iigious cosmology, but rather the accumulation of profit. As Curran attests: order-beE,;<1n to emergc frolll the croSS-CUlling, persUlHllized forms of non­
territorial rule characteristic of the feudal era.
The de"e1opment of a lay scribal and print culture alsu undermined The literature un the rise uf the modern state in Europe is already well­
the ideological ascendancy of the Church. The growth of commercial de"eloped, and it is not my intention here to provide another historical
scriptoria and subsequently commercial printing enterprises made it narrati"e of this process. Debates ha"e raged among theorists m'er whether
more difficult for the ecclesiastical authorities, ',",10 had pre"iously changes in milita,,' technologies, population growth, or some other combi­
directly controlled the means of book production, to exercise effective nation "'ere the faclors ultimately responsible for the rise of the modern
censorship. The failure of the Church to maintain its domination m'er state.6' ;\ h focus in this section is different from these studies. I am not
Ko \I E IJ I E \. A I. TO \10 IJ E R ~ Distributiollal Challges HI

concerned with explaining the roots of the urban bourgeoise ami centralized of wrillen amI printed doculnents. a grcat deal of importancc W;lS placcd 011
fOllllS of mit- as ~oci;11 phenonlen;l. lIor why thev forllled ;111 ;111iance \\ ilh pcrsollal. OJal It'slinl11I1\' as opposcd to \Hillcn dllClIIIICllls, which wcrc slill '
each other in some regions but not in others. Rather. my concern is to shO\\· considered untmstworth~·. Conseqllentl~'. a pcrSOll wellt before the court to
the W,ly the printing environment fa\'ored the interests of these two social ha\e ;I "hearing,- One unfortunate byproduct was that the deaf and dumb
forccs where they arose. In doing so. I hope to provide an additional reason appc;n to ha\'C h;ld 110 Icgal righls ill thirlcenth-century 1':nghllld. 7' Wills did
for wl1\' the transformation of world order occurred at this particular histor­ not reI\- on wrillen do("\nll('nts hllt rather persons witnessing the tcst;ltor
ica I juncture. making his bequests "with his OWll nlOnth "; they "saw. werc present. am)
hearcl" the trallSaction,-~ Alld of course \\'hat prev;liled in legal procedures
\\';lS a mere reAetlion of socictv at large, For example, business was COll­
Fro", Ihe Oalh 10 lire COlltnlet
dUeled. e\'en among Iwscent commercial entrepreneurs, hy word of mouth,
Socioeconomic relations during the Iligh to late ~Iiddle Ages were ehar­ if not solcl~' hecame of tradition and hahit. then certainly because "docu­
,lcterized by feudalism-that is, ,I hierarchy of personalized, croSS-CUlling ments were bound to he relati\'Cly rare until printing made thcir ;lutolllatic
relationships among vassals and lords."" This form of personalized mle reproduction possible.--' With illiteracy the norm, amI written docu1T1enta­
C\ul\-ed out of anciellt Germanic practices in which the oath of allegiance tion rarc. socioeconomic comlllunications in the feud,ll era were over­
played a central role in maintaining trust and discipline among warriors. 6­ whelmingl~' oral in nature.
The oath entailed an act of homage whereby one freeman would suhmit The highly perslJ1wliz,cd owl forlll of rille tl1;1t constituted fcud,d socicty
allegiance to another through the ceremonial placing of joined hands be­ contrihuted to the complex web of cross-cutting and overlapping lord-vassal
tween those of the lord, which resulted in a bond of mutual obligation. The mutual obligatiollS that reached across the territory of Europe. When agree­
eerelllony was highly personal, as evidenced by the bodily gestures of sub­ ments were reached primaril~' on a pcrsonal basis, it should come as no
mission often involving a kiss as well as the \'erbal oath and the joined hands. suprise that the form of those rclatiollShips \'<Hied enof1nollsly from regioJl
signaling the \'assal's allegiance to the lord "by mouth and hands.-6~ Feu­ to region. If we were to assume the perspective of an aspiring capitalist, the
dalism became the dominant mode of organizing socioeconomic relations feudal e11\'iromnent wOllld appear to he highly constraining. Spruyt de­
following the decline of the Carolingian monarchy in the ninth amI tenth scribes how:
centuries, and declined dramatically around the sixteenth century. It was
most fully developed in France ami Germany, and least developed in Italy, The legal c1inwte was IInfa\'Ourahle for trade gi\'en the IImlerde\"e1­
where ancient Roman traditions persisted and city life played a more promi­ opment of \Hillen codes. the importance of local ellstomary procced­
nent role in society.69 ings. the lack of instrumentally rational procedures, and the cross­
Although the oath of allegiance played an important symbolic role in CUlling nature of jurisdictions. Economically, coml11eree suffered from
affirming the social bonds between \'assal and lord. it \\'as more than just a great \'ariation in coinage and in weights and measures and a lack of
s)"lnholic gesture insofar as literacy was indeed rare during the High ~Iiddle c1earl~' defined property rights. TrallSaction costs were high.- r,
Ages and social rebtiollS were in fact primarily ch,nacterized by oral com­
munieations.-Il As Le Goff notes. "the feudal system was a world of gesture Since money as we know of it today was virtually nonexistent, feudal
and not of the written word."71 The pervasi\'eness of the spoken word in both financial obligations consisted mostly of barter, or in-kind transfers. 77 Legal
a practical and a metaphoric sense o\'er all of feudal society is perhaps best affairs were characterized b~' what has been called "banal justice," with each
illustrated. as Clanchy suggests, by the e\'olution of legal procedure. 72 It is locality assuming its own legal particularities-a situation encouraged by the
evidenced by the fact that prior to the thirteenth century parties were gi\'en lack of written laws prior to the thirteenth century in most of Europe with
notice to appear in law courts not by a writ. but by an oral summons which the exception of p;lrts of sOllthem France and Italy.~~ Secular and ecclesi­
was puhlicl~' proclaimed by crialores or "criers." Prior to the Widespread use astical lords llSed their OWII weights amI measures, while many local lords
;')1
MEIlIE\'AI. TO MOilER:\' Distributional Changes 15,

minted their own coins-in France alolle there were as 111 a 11\' as ,00 sp"b;ol;Ccll/\', with each spnrrillg on the de\Tlopmcnt of the other. So while
minters.-" All of this particularism was closely houlld up with the personal. Anderson is correclto point onlthat capit;llism sci the preconditions for the
ized, Of;11 form of rule inherent in feudalism, which encouraged represen­ widespread dissemination of printed material, the relatiollship bctween the
tatiolla!, as opposed to abstract, forms of measure, and \'ariation and localism two is not so eas~' to disentangle as each, in tum, affected the other." For
in socioeconOlllie and legal affairs up until the thirteellth centmy-a point the rise of capitalism was t'Inbedded in, alltl closely illtertwined with, a
that will he taken up again in the following section dealillg with nascent correspondin~ tramformation in the western European mode of comnlll­
stale bureaucracies. 'II nicalion, In other words. the shift from ;111 oral to a print culture was also a
Of cOllrse there were few capitalists in the Ilil;h t\liddle Ages who would shift from the Oelill to the roll Irelcl , with all of the cOlISequences for socio­
find any problem with what we now cOllsider to be a high degree of ~trans­ economic organization that emued. The impersonal bonds of a modern
action costs: But beginning in the twelfth century, a profoulld economic interdependent ecollOmy-organic. as opposed to mechanical, solidarity in
transformation took hold resultinl; in what Eric JOIICS calls "the Emopean Durkhei1l1's tenns-could not ht, sllStained on such" \'ast Ie\'el wilhollt ;1
t\lir;lele,"'1 From a multiplicity of causes-improvements in agricultural high de£;ree of literan' ,111<1 the pemwllency aud reproducibililY of printed
teelmiques, changes ill climate ;md demographics, the growth of interna­ documents.'" "'hile l1<1sc<:nt capitalist entrepreneurs lIIay have found the
tion;lltrade -economic produeti\'ity rose and grew more cOlJlplex.'~ As Rug-' oral-m;lI11lscript culture of the late t\liddle Ages to be highly cOllStraining,
gie explaillS, "economic relations became incre"singl~' monetized, and de­ the~' thri\Td in the more hospitable printin~ environment. It should cOllie
\'dopments in 'invisibles: inclnding the great fairs, shipping, insurance, amI as no surpri,e, then. that Rice identifies as one of the key f;lclors in "the
financial services, fmther lubricated conllllerce and helped to create a astonishingl~' rapid spread of printing" in early modern Europe, the ins<ltia­
European-wide market: 8' Out of this dynamic economic interaction re­ ble demand for printed products among "merchants, suhstantial artis<lns,
emerged many towlIS that had been dorlllallt since ROlllall times. And within lawyers. gm'eflmlent officials, doctors, and teachers who lived alld worked
these towns a new group began to coalesce into a coherent social force: the in towllS,"'­
burghers or tmm dwellers, or what would later be known as the "urban At the 1lI0st fU1Hlalllental be!' printing fanned the widespread lISe of
bomgeoisie." Spruyt astutely points out how few interests these new towns­ what might be callcd social cI!>slrclcl;ollS-bills of sale, deeds. court records,
pcople shared with the clergy and fcudallords who tlni\Td on the old insti­ licellSes. contracts. cOllstitutiom. decrees -that arc the essence of modern,
tutions: eontractarian societies, These social <lbstractions could only emerge, as Stock
and Clam·ln' point out, \\'ith a rise in gener;llliteracy ;nlt! a corresponding
Thus, coupled with the rise of the towns, a new set of interests and dependence on wrillen docnlllentatioll O\'er strictI v oral eOll1nlllnicatiollS - a
ideological perspecti\'es emerged with a new set of demands, The feu­ process that began, as pointed out in the pre\'ious chapter, in the High
dal order- based on cross-cutting jmisdietions and on ill-defined prop­ Middle Ages but was accelerated with the lIlass rcproducibility of printing.~~
erty rights and judicial procedures-did not fit the burghers' mercan­ Printing helped circulate in its m"n~' forms a standardized medium of ex­
tile pursuits, t\I<nket exchange ;l11d trade required abstract cOlltractual change essential for the sen'icing of ;1 complcx division of lahor within the
obligations with money as a medium,84 newly emerging urban-commercial centers of western Europe. Consider, in
this respect. the Widespread usc of printed paper currency as opposed to
The ideological perspectives and new set of demands to which Spru)'t melal coins or other tokens in facilitating a standardized mediulll of eco­
refers Aourished as the communications em'ironment began to change. first nomic exehange,'Q Or consider the dependence of the entrepreneur and the
with the growth of literacy and the use of written records in the urban centers financier on the newspaper, which was an im'ention new to printing.
of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and then more dramatically and McKusker and Gra\'esteijn note that "merchants and bankers in the fifteenth
forcefully with the spread of printing. In fact, one might go so far as to say and si"teenth centuries, in their continuing quest for heller ways to speed
tl1<lt the growth of the mban bourgeoisie and the spread of printing worked the Aow of business news. turned for help to the 1110st recent innovation in
~4 'IEIlIE"-\l, TO MOIlERN Distributional Changes 1)5

information teclmolog\'. the printing press."'" Thus what might be eonsid­ ami encoura~ed 1)\, the Protestant state that W;'lS illcorporated thcre in the
ered tile first forenlliller of the newspaper was a pnblish('(1 exchange ralt' sixlt'enth <:entm\', NOItl1 anrl Thomas note, for example. how the "Illcthods"
printed at the I.Hm exehalH;e fairs beginning in the late fifteenth century. of the Dutch merchants lI'ere more sophisticated. amI how the techniques
in which the "con to" or fixed exchallge rate was circulated in print for those of double-entt)' hookeeping \\'ere \\'idely taught and had hecome standard
allelldillg the fair. Q' The Amsterdam Commodity Price Cnrrent (COl/rs der ;lccOlmtan<:\' pr;lcli<:es."~ Accordillg to Dudley. it is no coincidence tlwt
Koopl/l(l/lsclrafJpell tot Amsterda 1/1 ) was published illtermittently as early as nWl1\' of these defining fe;ltmes of capit;llislll-sueh ;lS the stock exeh;lnge
15X5. ami weekly beginning in 1609:J~ Other cOlnmercial ami financial and the nlllltinationa I corpor;ltion-lI'ere origina lIy de\'e1oped in the Neth­
IIcwspapers sprouted throughollt Emope in the se\'entcenth century. in­ crlamls. a region that \las in many ways at the forefronl of the change in the
cluding in Augsbmg (1592), Bologna (1628). Bolzano (1631). Bordeaux mode of comllllmic;ltion, As J)1H11c~' cxpbil1S:
( 16H). Danzig ( 160S). Florence ( I59S). Genoa ( 1(19). Lille ( 1639). Lisbon
(I(JIO), London (160S), L~'ons (1627), Naples (1627). Piacenza (16H),and The remit for Dutch socicl~' lof exploiting print and literacy to their
Verona ( 1631 ),Q' These newspapers served an essential function in pro\'iding fullest] waS;l deeper penetration of market institutions than had existed
a standardized publication for the exchange of c0l11lnerciai information, in IHe\'iol1S comnlllllities, The examples of the AlIlsterd;lm Exchange
:\ccording to North and Thomas. the~' ha\'e been found in the archi\'es of Bank amI the Bourse illmtrate this point. The gre;lt popularity that
e\'et)' important commercial center in Europe,'H Their presence \\'as both these institutions enjm'ed from the moment the\' were founded could
an indication of, ,Ind a significant factor in. the rapid growth of mban com­ be possible only in a literate socicty familiar with the l1otiol1 that a
mercial acti\'ity in the se\'enteenth cenftlt)'. written document could be just ;lS \'aluable as gold or silver eoins.'l'i
At a more practical Ie\'el. both written and printed materials. and the
growth of literacy that lIaturally accompanied them. were indispensahle tools In SUIll, \lhile the clllergcnce of an mban bomgeois class in early 1lI0dem
in the day-to-day routines of the urban bourgeoisie, Indeed. standard ac­ Europe \\';lS the product of a multiplieit~, of factors. the soei;ll 1Il00'CllIent
counting practices and record-keeping. such as double-entry bookkeeping. flourished in the new COlll111llllications el1\'ironment. Printing not only func­
arc practically inconcei\'able in a purely oral el1\'ironment. While douhle­ tion;llly cOlllplelllented llI;lny of the b;lsic routines of the c;lpitalist entrepre­
entr\' bookkeeping emerged in Italy prior to the il1\'ention of printing. it was neur. hut more fnndamentally it pro\'ided the me;lns by which soci;ll ;lb­
a prodnet of a high Iy literate urhan populace ami spread rather (Iuickly str;lclions could circulate on a \\'ide scale, leading to a cOluplcx di\'ision of
throughout Emopean urban eellters once printillg and literacy took root labor. \\'itllOut the standardization and mass-reproducibility affordcd by
elsewhere,QI Nor should it be surprising that more ephemeral qualities as­ printing. it is unlikel~' that such ;l complex penetration of contractual socio­
sociated with the capitalist spirit, such as a meticulous rationalism and an economic relations could hal'e de\'eloped as it did, Certainly the oral­
ahstract cogniti\'e orientation. Aourished in precisely those areas where print­ m;l11l1SCript culture of medie\';ll Emope pl;lccd signific;lnt ohst;lclcs ill the
iug and literacy initialh- spread the fastest.% As a Illunber of theorists ha\'e path of capitalist de\'Clopment. Once that el1\'ilOml1ent chal1ged. howe\'er,
argucd. both writing and printiug famr and encourage an abstract, ratioual a complex s~stelll of contr;lclarian socioeconomic rcl'llions began to thri\'C,
cogniti\'e orientation by arresting the Aow of oral cOI1\'ersatiou. permitting The consequences of this particular distribution;ll change for world order
the comparison and juxtaposition of words and documents. and detaching transformation arc twofold: First, the growth of ;In urban bomgeoisie had
the content of comn1tmieatiollS from place, time. and personality,Q- Thus in what I earlier called a "b'eling" effect on patterns of political and economic
those areas where we find a high rate of literacy and a penetration of printed obligation. at least in urban are;lS. cutting through the entangled webs of
material, we also find the Aourishing of a highly de\'e!oped commercial personal lo~'alties characteristic of the feudal era and opening up the possi­
ethos, bilit\' for common mle from a single eenter.'(~' As Axtmann explains. "The
Perhaps the best example comes from the United Prm'inces of the Neth­ disintegration of felld;llism at the 'molecular' le\'el of the manor/\'illage re­
erlands, where literacy was high and printing was enthusiastically exploited sulted in the displacement of political-legal power upw;lrds to the 'national'
I',()
MEIJIE\' ..\L TO :'-IODERN Distributional Changes 1{7

1111
bcl." Thus one of the eentraJ features of medie\'al \\'orld order- mnltiple landmark treatises - such as Richard Vitmeal's Dialogue 011 tire COl/r.se of
and O\'Cflapping bn:rs of pcrsollalized ;1\ltllOrit~'-dissoIH:d alllong ,m ill­ the E.\cheqlll'r. written during the reign of II emy II ( 1154 --II WJ)- hdped
crcasingl~' illlportant segment of the popnJation. The oath ga\c wa~' to the to define the impersonal role of the bureaucratic administr;ltor to the state
colltract as the h,lSis of earlv modern urban eeollomie relations. as an abstmct entity. I'" 1100\"<:\cr. the preeo11(litiom for ccntralized admin­
Second. the risc of a bourgeois class directly contrillllled to the celltral­ istratin' rule dcpended not iust on ide;ls. hut '11so. and morc crllcially. on
izing dri\'e of state 1l1Onarchs by providing finances for standin~ armics in the technological capacil\' to cam' Ihem ont-a distinC'lh- ahsent fealme of
retmll for standardized, wtiOlwl adlllinistr,ltioll of legal ,md comlller<:ial pro­ political authorih· for most nasccnt states in medic\'al Europe.
ccdures within a Icrritorial sp'lce. 111 Manll's words. the lle\\'I~' emerging Aspirinf,: medie\·;llmonarchs fonnd Ihat their mO\'es toward centralization
capitalists "cnlered and reinforced a world of emergellt warring \-ct diplo­ were difficnlt to slIstain became of the COllSlr;lints of the prcvailing social,
matically rcgulating states. Their need for, and nllnerahility to. state regu­ economic. and politic,11 em·ironmcnt which. as ollliined earlicr. was over­
1;ltion hoth illlcmally alld geopolitically, ,md the stale's nccd for hll,mces, whelmingI\' cOllstituted by personalized, oral conmll1nications. Thus whilc
pushed classes and states toward a territorialh- centr,llized organization."'OZ we find the shells of modern St,ltes beginlling to den'lop as early as the
III this respect, the rise of the urban hourgeoisie e,1I1 he scen ,IS a trcl/lsitio/la[ twelfth <:entury in eoulltries like England. wherc writtcn administration \\'as
distributiollal change illSofar as it not only helped to dissohc the architecture more 'l<h-anced. the norm for the rest of Emope was a ('oustant tension
of medie\'al world order (specifically. feudal socioeconomic relations). but between the forces of localization amI centr'11ization. Onc reason was that
it also gave positive impetus to, and \\',IS a eonstituti\'e force in. the e1l1er­ long-range ,1dministration based on networks of personal or blood tics was
l;ence of modem world order (specifically. the celltralization/st,1I1dardization ineffectin: for sustaining cross-generational rule. It had;1 tendcncy to dissolvc
of territorial rule from a single center), The following sectioll takes a look into peth' ficfd0111s \vith local pri\ilege-a pattern that \\·as repeated often
elt this process from the perspective of centralizing state bureaucracies. throughout the 7\ liddle ;\ges as e\·idenced. for example, hy the dissolution
of the Carolingian a11<1 Ottonian d~'lIasticsY'" I\lcdic\',11 political rule. in
Poggi's \\ords. upossessed an inherent tendency to shift the seat of effective
The Emergellce of Modem Centralized State Bureal/cracies
power. the fnlcrum of rule. do\\'nward toward the lower links in thc chain
As Garrett f\ lattingly has pointed out. precursors 10 the modern state can of lord-\'assal rel,ltions" -a tendency no doubt related to the prevailing
lC tr,lced back r.lr into antiquity.1I11 The first bureaucr,lcy arose ill ancient personalized-oral comn1l1nieations em'ironment of the time. lllI Conse­
)nmCri,1 alongside the de\'c1opmcnt of writing. which. as many ha\c noted, quently. the political map of Europe in the f\liddle Ages \\as dctermined,
sa necess,lry precondition for its development. 'fH However. the roots of the according/~' to \Iattingly. not so much "b~' geography, or national cultme,
egal allll fiscal systems exclusive to modem state bureaucracies in Europe or historic de\'elopment" as it \\·as "b~' the irrelevant accidents of birth and
late from the c1e\cnth and twelfth centuries and. 1I0t surprisingly. were marriage and death.- III
'Iosel\' bound up with the reestablishment of secular literac~' and the lay The complexity In' \\·hieh personalized. cross-cuttiug lord-vassal entan­
Ise of writtell dOClllllellts. 1Il1 Of course, secular literaC\' ,1I1d the usc ofwritten glements took root in the I\liddle Ages made allY attenlpts at centralization
<:xts wcre not solel~' responsible for the rise of the modern stale. 'lCchnieal and ration;J! ad111inislr,1tion within a terriloriail y defined space extremely
nnO\'ations originating in northern Italian communes-such as administra­ difficult for nascent states. Prior to the rediscO\'ery of Roman Law, there was
ion by an impersonal salaried bureaucracy serYing for a limited term and no conception of a distinction between private legal and fiscal prerogatives
louble-entry bookkeeping-provided important precursors to the form that of local authorities and that of a public realm. In the case of local lords,
tate bureaucracies ultimately took. 10<\ Certain ideas were also influential in "On land under his jurisdiction. public economy and the fiscal obligations
i\'ing birth to st<Jte bureaucracies in Europe-especially the rediscO\cry of related to it were identical \\·ith the domestic economy of his pri\'ale house­
~oman law, which helped fix the notion of a distinct "publie- realm. w And hold."": Raising consistent state re\·elllles-especially from one generation
1-1( ) ~IEDIE\'''L TO ~IODER:" Distributional Changes

1e\,c1."'"1 Thus one of the central fe,ltures of medie\'al world order-multiple landmark trcatiscs-snch ,IS Richard Filzneal's Dialoglle Oil the (
aIII I O\Trlapping h~Trs of pcr.son:llil.l,d ;Jnthority-dissoh-ed mnon!; :In in­ the l':,\C[,Cr[lIcr. written dminl.; the reign of Ilellty II (11,4--11 K9)
creasinr;ly important segment of the popubtion, The oath r;a\'e wa~' to the to dcfine thc impersonal rolc of thc bmcaucratic administrator to
culltreld as the basis of earlv modem urban economic relations, as an abstract clltity.'"s Ilo\\'C\'Cr. the prccomlitions for ccntralizc
SecoJ1(I. the rise of a bourgeois class directly contributed to the central­ istrati\'C rule dcpcnded 110t ;nst on idcas, lJ11t also, and morc Cnt
iz.inr; dri\'e of state monarchs by prm'idinr; finances for stamlinr; armies in the techll010!;ical capacity to carry thcm ont-a distinctly abscnt f
return for standardized, I<Itional administration of legal ami commercial pro­ political authority for most nascent statcs in medicval Europc.
cedures within a territorial space. In 1\lann\ words, the nc\\'I~' cmcr~ing Aspirin!; mcdic\almon<Hchs found thatthcir mO\'cs toward ccn\'
capitalists "cntered ami reinforced a world of emergent w,nring \'ct diplo­ were difficult to sustaill bccamc of the cOl1Straints of tlrc prcvaili'
matically regulating states, Their need for, and nJlnerabilih' to, state regu­ economic, amI political em'ironmeut which, as outlined carlicr, ,
lation both intemallyandgeopolitically.amlthe stale's necd for financcs. whelmingly comtituted by pcrsollalizcd, or;11 conu1Hmica!ions, '1'1.
pushed classes and states toward a territorially centralized orr;anization,"l ol we find the shells of modcrn statcs beginning to dcvelop as C,ll'
In this respcct. the rise of the urban bourgeoisie can be scen as a trelllSitiOlwl hvclfth ecullm' iu countries like I':ngland, whcrc wrillcn mlminisll
distribntional change insofar as it not only helped to dissoke thc architecture more a(h-anced, thc l10rm for thc rest of Europe was a comlall
of medieval world order (specifically. feudal socioeconomic relations), but beh\'een the forces of localizalion and centralization, Oue rea SOli
it also gave positive impctus to. and was a eonstitnti\'e forcc in. the elller­ long-range adnIinistralioll based on llct\\'orks of pcrsonal or ble){J(
genee of modern world order (specifically, the centralization/standardization ineffecti\'e for susta ining cross-generationa1rule, It had a tendency tl
of territorial rule from a single center), The following section takes a look into peth' ficfdoms with local pri\'ilcgc - a pallcm thai was repca
at this process from the pcrspecti\'e of centralizing state bureaucracics, throughoutthc f\liddlc Agcs as c\'idcnced, for cxamplc, by thc di
of thc Carolillgiall amI Ollonian dynastics.!"'! Mcdicval politiC<l
Poggi's words, "possesscd an inherenttemlency to shift the seat 01
The Emergellce of Modem Celltredi:::ed State Bureaucracies powcr. the fulermll of rn1c. down\\'ard toward the lowcr links in I
As Garrell rvlallingk has pointed oul, precursors to the modem stale can of lord-\assal rclatiom" -a temlcncy no donbt rclated to the I
be traced back f,1I into antiquity.lll' The first bureaucracy arose in ancient persollalizcd-oral C011111ll111icatiollS el1\'irolllncut of thc timc,llII
Sumcria alongside the de\'(~lopment of writing, which, as mall\' l1a\'c noted, qucntl~, thc political map of Europc ill thc Middle Agcs was dctcl
is a necessary precondition for its de\'elopmenl.l'H Hm\,e\'er. the roots of the accordingly to f\ lattingly. llot so much "by geography, or national,
legal and fiscal systems exclusive to modem state bureaucracies in Europe or historic de\'elopment" as it was "by the irrclevant accidcllts of hi
datc from the ele\'enth and h\'e1fth centuries and. not surprisingly, were marriagc and dcath,"II)
closely bound up with the reestablislnnent of secular literacy and the by The complexity h~' which personalized, cross-clll1illg lord-vassal
nse of wrillen documents. In; Of comsc. secular Iitcrac\' and the usc of wrillcn glements took root ill thc 1\liddlc Ages m;1<le any allcmpts at cen!r,ll
texts were not solely responsible for the rise of the modern state, 'lccllJlical and rational administration within a territorially dcfincd spacc cxl
innm'ations originating in northern Italian communes -such as administra­ difficult for llasccnt states. Prior to the rediscO\'CIY of Roman Law, th,
tion by an impersonal salaried bureaucracy sening for a limited term and no conception of a distinction beh\'een pri\'ate lega 1aud fisca 1preH'
double-entry bookkeeping-pro\'ided important precursors to the form that of local authorities and that of a public realm, In the case of 10c<1:
state bureaucracies ultimatelv tookY"" Certain ideas \\'ere also inAnelltial in "On land under his jurisdiction, public ceonomy and the fiscal obli·
giving birth to state bureaucracies in Europe-especially the rediscO\'ery of related to it were identical with the domestic economy of his pri\'ate
Roman law, which helped fix the notion of a distinct "public.. realm.1O" And hold,"lll Raising consistent state revenucs-espeeially from one gen'

Ii

li
l"'h)
\l1-:1l11-:\',\1. to ~IOIJER:'\ Distributional Changes hl)

of leaders to the next-was \'irtually impossible as a I\picalll1edie\'al ruler with those of the central rulers, Amllwppih' for these statcs, thc ne\\' tOWI1
"knew the Iota I of neither his income lIor his outgoings" of his clllire do­ Inen \\l'IC ahll' ;lIul \\illin!.; to 11I0\ide nl(lI1('\' in the fornl of la,xes ill e)(challl'
main. 111 One consequence of this entangled particularism was that kings for the domestic senices IHO\'ided hy the stale, The specific form tll<1t th
who wanled re\TlIlleS from the lands under their jurisdiction regular,," tra\'­ relatiollShip took \';Hied froln stale to sblte. as Tilly and i\lann have doci
eled with a large entourage in order to "COIlSlnne the prodnce of their scat­ 11ll'11ted. 1:" But in palls of Enropc from tlte fiftccnlh 10 lltc SC\CnICCII
!cred holdillgs,"II~ And sillce each hOll1mage of lord-\'assal ohligatioll was centuries. the general phcnomenon of modem stale hureancracics nlld
entcred illto ;lIll1ilu persollae (that is, persollally) the form of rule \'aried territorialh- di~tiuct. ahsolulist rule began 10 clllergc alld tltrive a~ tltc 11101 1
enormomly from relationship to relationship .md region to region, Accord­ form of political authority,
ing to Poggi: \\'hat role did the printin!.; clI\'irolnm'nt play in facilitaling the cmcrgC\1
and succcss of ccntralized fornls of mle lJ\'Cr altemali\'e "de-centercd"lo\"
of organization? i\ lost importanth-, the printing envirolnnent providcd
the lord's relationship to the uhilnate ohjects of rule, the populace.
tools necessan' for sl<mdardized, intergcnerational rule inlhe form of rati
\\as medi'lted differently hy each \'assal. The size of the fief. the exact
bureaucratic ad1l1inistr'ltion froln a singleccnlcr. Indecd, as pointed
tenns 011 which it was granted, the rights of rule oyer it that remained
ahO\'C, a necess'H\' precondition for the emergence of burcaucratic adl
with the lord or that were yested in the \'assal-as these aspects of the
istration is some form of writing system. Thus it is not surprising thai
basic relationship varied. so did the modalities and cOlltent of the
de\'Clopmcnt of modcrtl slate burcaueracics in I':lHopc was closely btl
exercise of ru le. 111
up with the spread of secular literacy in the High Middle Ages. So in II
regions where litewcy is relatively high, hureancratic sJ>ccializ,ltion an"
Nonetheless, hy the thirleenth ami fourteenth centuries state authoril\' \'Clopnlcntlcnds 10 bc nlore a(h-;1l1eed, For example, in the Glse of EngL,
was undergoing, although with occasional sethacks, a gradual process of sixtv indi\'idnals were employed in its Chancery in the middle of tltc I,
consolidation .md eentralization-a kind of "two-steps forward/one-step teenth cenhtr\': b~ tlte fifteenth ccntlH\', more than a hundred were
backw.ml'" proccss. To be sure, the process was not uniform across all of ployed at the Court of COInmon Pleas alone. III
Europe. In Germany and Italy, for example, city-leagues and city-stales pro­ Of course. pressures for burcaucratization, in turn, dr()\'C secular lill'
yidcd alternative "de-eentered" logics of organiz.llion. But elsewhere - in and a dcmand for standardized cOlmllllllicatiollS. Early printers werc Ii'
England, France, and Holland, for example-centralized forms of rule he­ to recognize this market amI. as a result, thrivcd 011 slate connnissiOlI
gan to displace the feudal system. Theorists dis,lgree on the primary impetus printed adlllinistrati\'e records. ,\s Feb\Te and Martin point out, stale poL
for this process, or why it finally took hold at this juncture rather than at an acti\'eh- encouraged thc creation of large, nalional publishing Ill'
earlier time. Some, such as Tilly, place more emphasis on changes in mili­ throughout earh' modern Europe,I22 And the printed products email;'
tary technologies. 116 Others give as much emphasis to population pressures from these large puhlishing centers ill hun increased the size ofbureauci
ami ,m accompanying economic boom. W \Vhate\'er the ultilnate reason, in documentation, which neccssitated yet more specialization and persoll
those areas of Europe a similar pattern can be discerned: In the context of In Gnenee's words, 'Tlte proliferation of offices ami officials incvilabl}
an increasingly dangerous em'ironment, an imperative was placed on the to a proliferation of the documents without which State action \\ouk
main!cnance of a standing army, and where relc\'ant a war Acct. that could impossihle and on \\hich its power was hased."'"
be summoned by a central ruler. 1I8 The new demands of war necessitated The 1110st ob\'ious wa\' the new communications em'ironment fan
that these rulers turn inward to maintain domestic stability and order. and, the interests of centralized state rulers was by facilitating more effecti\T
more imporl;mtly, to find a way to raise constant re\'emles to finance the systematic rewards amI sanctions in the !.;O\'Crtlance of outlying regions, '
war machi ne. 11q Forlunatel~" the state rulers found willing alIies in the urban ticularly through the standardization of legal institutions and systems n:
bourgcoisie, whose interests in order and rational administration com'erged reet taxation, As Til"" affirms, "Almost all European gm'ertlments even In
l)U
"EIlIE\'"'' TO 'IOIJER:-.I Distributional Changes 91

took~teps \\'hiell hOlllogenized their popnlations,-I:~ \\lith lIleans of slan­ Fllglam\ to hO\1Se the e\"('r-illcrc;lsillg Illllnber of officialm;lps,'lll I ,ikewi~
cb,dizct! donnnentalion IHll\ided hy printillg, \tate rulers could effecti\'l'h­ Buissclct nolo witll respec! to France: "At Ihc time of I,ouis XIV's ;lccessir
cut through and transcend the \'agaries of personalized. feudal obligations Fren('11 gO\erninl; circles possessed a \\'ell-de\'eloped seme of the u~
tlwt so often produced discrep'lIleies among loc.lles throughout the I\ing's fulness of maps, and there \\ere cartographers capable of respomlillg to tlH
dOlllain, III the printing el1\'irolnnent. regularized and impersonal proce­ m.'e(k , , , Ithrough I all abuudauce of pre,sses. mostly eoucclllrated iu Pal
dures could be more effectively established th'lt did not vary o\'Cr a territo­ capable of printinl; and diffming large maps in comiderable qualltities,"
riall~' defined sp;lee or, more illlportalltl~', across generations of rule, As all For example:
illustration. "hetween 1665 ami 1690 I.ouis XI\' prolllulg;lted ordinances
and codes that uniformly regulated over all of France such di\'erse matters For eeonoulic amI financial plallning. In;lps were cOlnmissioned to
as ei\'il and criminal court procedure. the management of forests and ri\'ers. shO\\' \\here the \'arious fiscal di\'isions. or gencralitcs, rail. and \\'herc
shipping awl sailing. and the trade in hlack sl;l\'l's,"I:; In the printing el1\i­ specific taxcs like lhc gahclle (salt tax) \\Tle 10 bc paid, , , ,Othcr Inaps
ronmen!. re\'elllleS could be collected effieienth- ami eonsistenth-, \\'ith the
,
\I'ere ordered whell great puhlic works like the caual du rvlidi were
result that the size and power of the state. and the effeeti\'eness of centralized being plauned: this calla) had a \cry rich cartography a\sociatcd with
mle, began to grow, it. Othcrs, ;I(;ain, \\Trc couunissioued to show the sites of the In;nes
The state's interest in standardization (or hOll/ogellizatioll, as Till~ aptl~' in Frallce. or the (];llure and extent of its f(1 rcsts,11 2
calls it). was closely bound np with a desire not only to lIIore efficiently and
eonsistenth- extract financial re\'Cnues. but also to maintain dOlllestie order :\nother e\;lnlple of the \\'a\' the printiug c11\'iromncnt flleled the di~
ami security through surveilLJnce of the population and territory-an inter­ plinarv state \\as ill the area of public cducation. as Luke in particular I,
est that thri\'('d with the a\';Jilability of printing, One of the more compelling ShOWlI,lll Comider in this respect thc \\'a~' thc printiug ell\'iromneut fan)[
interpretations of the state's inlcrest in sltr\Tillanee is 1\ Iiehel Fouca II It's dis­ standardized public "exam illations" through \\'hich each im1i\'idual "
cussion of the "disciplinarv state,"I:', Foucault argues that in the transition compelled to pass, helping to create .1 clnnulati\'C, imli\'idual "archive"
to the modem state, coercion and O\'ert \iolence as tools for social order persons undcr the slate, Lnkc notes hO\\ "Printing euabled the 'power
were gradually replaced b\' a more impersonal "micro-politics" of discipline \Hiting' to beco(l1e uni\Trsalized and standardized; teachers like waHIt
designed to morally regulate or "normalize" indi\'iduals through institutional examined. e\'aluated. recorded. amI describcd those in their charge acco:
regulation and bureaucratic administration,'2- Though Foucault is more ing to standardizcd (administrali\T) forms bascd on underlying c1assi fical!
concerned with the ideas that lay behind this transition. it is easy to see hO\\' eriteria: 11 • These standardized. printed exal11in;ltions helped to instill a sel
the material instruments of technology at the disposal of centralized state of rank in the population \\'hich, as Foucault describes, defined "the gr'
administrators \\'ere crucial in facilitating this reorientation,l:S fOrln of distribution of indi\'idnals in the education order. , , , an alignnH
Perh'lps the best example of the way printing helped to empower the of age groups. one after another; a succession of subjects tanght and <\\1
"disciplinary state" is the reproduction of printed llIaps used for administra­ tions treated, , :11 1 In this \\';1\', standardized Jlnblic cdncatioll ill the f()l
tive purposes, As Barber notes with respect to England. 1)\, the sixteenth of printed school textbooks and prillted school ordinanccs sen'ed the di~
century state ministers "came to expect a greater precision in maps than had plinary interests of the state. \\'hieh promoted a uniformity of belief an1(1
their predecessors. and several became more sophisticated in their e\'alua­ the population th rough compu Isory sc hooling of the young,l 'r,
lion of, and their awareness of the potential uses of. maps for gO\'emment: In Slll1l. the 11l00'elllent to\\'ard 11l0dern state bureaucracies, which beg
He goes on to say that the gO\'ernll1ent of the time "seems to ha\'e shO\m a in the High ;-.. Iiddle Ages. was fa\'Ored by the change in the mode of co
growing appetite for printed maps. which \\'ere cheaper, increasingly plen­ munieation. first \\'ith the gradual increase in secular literacy and then, me
tiful, and less prone to scribal errors in trallSmission than their manuscript dramatically. \\ith the introductioll of printing, Printing fueled the stratl'l
eounlcrparts,"IN In 1610, a State Paper Office was formalh- established in interests of nascent centralized state bureaucracies by prm'idillg the me;1
l}2 \IFI>IE\',\I, 1'0 \I(lIJFR~ Distributional Changes 93

In' whith stmdardized docu1l1ents-from school texthooks. to public ordi­ urban bourgcoisic. and modcrn statc burcallcracics, Thc prinling cll\'iroll
nalllTS alld fistal rcgnlaliom. to II1;)PS of thc rcalnl-could bc Inass rcplO­ mCllt fa\orcd thc dcmallds of cOlltraclariall socioctollonlic rclaliom by PCI
duccd allll disscminated. In this wa~'. printin~ prm'ided the tools 1)\, which milling the widcspread llSe of social abstracliollS crucial to 1l1Odern, inlcr
celltralizin~ rulers could promote homogenous policies across territorialk dependent Cl'OIlOlnies, This particular social force was \'ital to till
dcfincd spaccs allllthus dissoln' the cross-cullillg allll mTrlapping iurisdic­ dc\'Clopmcnt of modcrn political rule imof;u as its illtcrcsts in stalldardil:1
tio11S tharactcristie of the medie\'al world order. As printin~ prm'ided a tion ami ordcr tOl1\Tr~ed with thosc of ccntralizing state monarths, "Il(
1I1c,n1S to mass-reproduce documellts at lillie cost. a s~'stem of intergellera­ \\Tre willing to prm'idc dOlllcstic stabi1it~, in t'\changc for the ability 10 extral'
tiollal rille conld be cstablislled. thus freczing thc tendenc\' that had bccn rC\TI1\ICS tllfollf;h Iaxcs, Thc capabilitics of printillf;-cspccially thc Ilia,
repeated th rough out the ~ Iiddle Ages for centra Iized ru Ie to wit her followi IIg reproduction of standardizcd doculncllts-:r!so cmpowcrcd tire disciplina,
the dealh of inAuential personalities, ~loreO\'Cr. altemati\'C forms of extant state. which had a \Tsted interest in both thc homogenizatioll of the pOpl1
politital authority that lackcd a single. celltered form of mle-the Italiall lation and the stalldardizatioll of adlllinistralion, Althollf;h Ihcsc distrilJII
city-states ,md the German cit\'-Ieagues. for ex;nnple -could not bellefit tional thanges \\'Cre crncial in the mcdie\'al-to-moderll trallsformatioll ('
from lhe printillg ell\'ir0l1l11cllt to the same extent as did centralized state world ordcr. thc\' do not tell the whole story, The nt'\t chaptcr cxplorcs th,
burc;nlcracies, P- As a result. the succcss of thc centralized state bureaucratic rclatiol1Ship bCl\HTII thc challge ill thc Inodc of COlllllllll1ication alld I'"~
s~'stem of rule became the model of political authorih' for modern Europe transformation of social epistemology,
as "'hole.

In this chapter I ha\'e dcscribcd ho\\' the illtroduction of printing ill me­
die\'al Europe brollght about specific distributional changes that e1l1powered
eert;lin aelors and social forces at the expense of others. ~ lost immediatek
affected by the alkent of printing was the transnational autllOril\' of thc
Roman Catholic Church. which had C01l1e close to establishing a theocratic
papal go\'ernment o\'er much of western Ellrope in the High ~ liddle Ages
based on a 1I1onopoly of the reprodllction of knowledge. The Church's pre­
elllineni positioll in medie\al world order was undercut by forces ",hose
strategic interests coincided with, and were augmented b\', the alhent of
prinling-the Protestant Reformation and scientific hunwnisnl. The new
communic;ltions c11\iron1l1ent fm'ored the interests of thesc two social fortes
by permilling the mass reproduelion and Widespread transmission of ideas
outside of the papal-monastic nctwork. The Church's interests. on the other
hand, were significantly disalhantaged b~' the change in the mode of com­
Inunication. as e\'idenced 1)\, its explicit condenmation of the printing press
once its fllll potential had been unleashed.
The chapter also explored the wa\' in which distributional changes as­
sociated with printing helped facilitate constituti\e features of modern world
order: specifically. contractarian socioeconomic relations among the new

You might also like