1 research outputs found
E-readers and the death of the book: or, new media and the myth of the disappearing medium
The recent emergence of e-readers and e-books has b
rought the death of the book to the centre of
current debates on new media. In this article, we a
nalyse alternative narratives that surround the
possibility of the disappearance of print books, do
minated by fetishism, fears about the end of
humanism, and ideas of techno-fundamentalist progre
ss. We argue that, in order to comprehend
such narratives, we need to inscribe them in the br
oader history of media. The emergence of new
media, in fact, has often been accompanied by narra
tives about the possible disappearance of
older media: the introduction of television, for in
stance, inspired claims about the forthcoming
death of film and radio. As a recurrent narrative s
haping the reception of media innovation, the
myth of the disappearing medium helps us to make se
nse of the transformations that media
change provokes in our everyday life