The book is not dead, says Harvard library director
September 16, 2009 | 8:42 am
By Paul Biba
This is a quote from Quill & Quire and is from Robert Darnton, as part of the promotion of his new book The Case for Books:
… the general lack of concern for history among Americans has made us vulnerable to exaggerated notions of historic change–and so has our fascination with technology. The current obsession with cellular devices, electronic readers and digitization has produced a colossal case of false consciousness.
As new electronic devices arrive on the market, we think we have been precipitated into a new era. We tout “the Information Age” as if information did not exist in the past. Meanwhile, e-books and devices like the Kindle represent less than 1% of the expenditure on books in the United States.
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Comments:
The quote above suggests that Robert Darnton minimizes the importance of ebooks. However, the following quote suggests the opposite (bold added) :
It may be time to update Simon and Garfunkel:
The last line above actually asks “Is the theater really dead?” in the original lyrics to “The Dangling Conversation” written by Paul Simon.