|  | Reading Assignments | 
   
    | WEEK 1 | 9/3. NO CLASS (Reg Day) | 
   
    | WEEK 2 | 9/10. Introduction 
        Discussion: The Promises and Failures of the Digital Revolution | 
   
    | WEEK 3 | 9/17. Theorizing Orality and Literacy 
        Walter Ong, Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing 
          of the Word, 1-138, 156-79.Homework Assignment #1 | 
   
    | WEEK 4 | 9/24. Was There a "Printing Revolution"?  
        Elizabeth Eisenstein, The Printing Revolution in 
          Early Modern Europe, 3-90*Anthony T. Grafton, "The Importance of Being 
          Printed", Journal of Interdisciplinary History 11 (Autumn 
          1980): 265-86 Philip 
          Tan, 
          Little Leadings. ( Student cyber-fiction 
          set in a sixteenth-century printshop.)Homework Assignment #2
 | 
   
    | WEEK 5 | 10/1. A Visit to the Burndy Library 
        Lynn Thorndike, ed. The Sphere of Sacrobosco and 
          Its Commentators (Chicago, 1949), 118-23*Michael T. Clancy, "Looking Back From the Invention 
          of Printing", in Literacy in Historical Perspective, ed. 
          Daniel P. Resnick, 7-22.*Adrian Johns, The Nature of the Book: Print and 
          Knowledge in the Making, 1-57Optional: Eisenstein, Printing Revolution, 
          185-252Homework Assignment #3  | 
   
    | WEEK 6 |  
        10/8. Erasmus and Identity 
         
          
         
          *Lisa Jardine, Erasmus, Man of 
            Letters, 3-53 
          *Erasmus, On Good Manners For Boys 
          *Erasmus, The Paraclesis (Introduction 
            to his edition of the New Testament)Joey 
          Rozier, Modern Adages. (Student Project Inspired by Erasmus.) 
          Optional : Eisenstein, Printing 
            Revolution, 109-84 
          Homework Assignment #4
 | 
   
    | WEEK 7 | 10/15. NO CLASS (Columbus Day) 
        Select a chapbook for your first 
          paper project.Nicholas 
          Hausman, Chapbook Analysis. (Student analysis of Guy of 
          Warwick.) | 
   
    | WEEK 8 | 10/22. English Chapbooks 
        *Margaret Spufford, Small Books and Pleasant Histories: 
          Popular Fiction and Its Readership in Seventeenth-Century England, 
          1-82, 156-93*Roger Thompson, ed. Samuel Pepys' Penny Merriments, 
          102-13, 247-63Homework Assignment #5 
          
 | 
   
    | WEEK 9 | 10/29. Visit to the Bow and Arrow Press 
        Harvard 
          Gazette article on the Bow and Arrow PressTen-page paper due
 
 | 
   
    | WEEK 10 | 11/5. The Stage and the Page: The Case of the Early Modern Theater 
        in Print 
        *Julie Stone Peters, Theatre of the Book, 1480-1880: 
          Print, Text, and Performance in Europe, 15-40*Donald McKenzie, "Typography and Meaning: The 
          Case of William Congreve", in Buch und Buchhandel in Europa 
          im achtzehten Jahrhundert, 81-125William 
          Congreve, The Way of the World Homework Assignment #6
 | 
   
    | WEEK 11 | 11/12. Rousseau and His Readers in the Eighteenth Century 
        Online 
          Biography of Rousseau *Robert Darnton, "Readers Respond to Rousseau: 
          The Fabrication of Romantic Sensibility", in Darnton, The Great 
          Cat Massacre and Other Episodes in French Cultural History, 215-56.*Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Julie, or La Nouvelle Héloise, 
          translated and abridged by Judith H. McDowell (Penn State University 
          Press, 1968), Letters 1-14, pp. 25-53.*Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Confessions, Book 
          I Homework Assignment #7 | 
   
    | WEEK 12 | 11/19. Readers and Publishing Today 
        Jason Epstein, Book Business : Publishing Past, 
          Present, and Future, allHomework Assignment #8 | 
   
    | WEEK 13 | 11/26. Consultations With Instructor 
        Have a Happy Thanksgiving! | 
   
    | WEEK 14 |  
        12/3. The Future of Print and Media Online 
         
          A Conversation with Ann Wolpert, Director 
            of the MIT Libraries, and Frank Urbanowski, Director of the MIT PressBrowse the 
          MIT Press web site. Be sure to click on the link "About 
          the Press", which contains a brief history of the Press.Read the 
          2000-2001 Annual Report by the Director of the MIT libraries. | 
   
    | WEEK 15 | 12/10. The Politics and Perils of Online Communities 
        Cass Sunstein, Republic.com, allFive-Page Paper due on 12/11
   |