Print.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Dynamics of Mass Communication
Advertisements

BOOKS The Publishing Industry. Amazon KINDLE.
Evolution of Writing and Printing. Where we left off… Petroglyph: Images created by removing part of a rock surfaces by pecking and carving Pictograph:
Making Sense of Media The World of Media. What is CULTURE? defined as “the symbols that individuals, groups and societies use to make sense of daily life.
PRINT Printing Press Invented by Johannes Gutenberg Mid 1400’s (Germany)
2. Books Christopher Burnett California State, Long Beach.
Unit One Print Media.
Books And the power of print.
1 Books Chapter 6 © 2009, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Alexis Hernandez.  The selection, preparation, and distribution of printed matter—including books, newspapers, magazines, and pamphlets.
Regional Professional
Books The Permanent Medium. Ancient History Clay Tablets 2,500 B.C. Papyrus Scrolls Egypt, Rome, Greece First Public Library Athens 540 B.C. Had 1 ½ million.
Print Media BooksNewspapersMagazines. Books  The most credible form of print media  Durability  Association with formal education  Preserve thoughts,
Benjamin Franklin ( ).
Writing the Future Changes and challenges to the writing and publishing industry.
From Gutenburg to Binary Code. Do I even gotta…? 2 nd oldest form of mass media Exists in marketplace for goods/services, but also…? Ideas Political,
Illuminated Manuscripts: beautiful but oh so time consuming…
“The Renaissance” 16 th and early 17 th Century A period of REBIRTH.
Books: The Durable Medium Comm 101 Chapter 3. History of books Early forms Papyrus From reed in Egypt (3000 B.C.) Parchment Dried animal skins Durable.
Books are our friends and teachers. Warming up Match the words with their definitions. Stories, novels, poems, plays in books. Stories, novels, poems,
Chapter 4 Books: The Birth of the Mass Media
Spelling this week! Suffix Suffix -ly secretly.
ABCDE Points On Average, about how many books are published in the United States each year? A. 550 B C. 5 5,000 D. 5.
The Book Industry Week Five. BASIC THEMES The modern book did not arrive in a flash as a result of one investor’s grand change The book as a medium of.
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Slide 1 Joseph R. Dominick University of Georgia-- Athens.
Media Evolution By: Gina Levina Grade: 11.
Comm 233 BOOKS Mass Media Technological Basis Print Technology Books, Newspapers, Magazines Electronic Technology Records, Radio, Television, World Wide.
The book – the friend of people. Reading is in present a favourite leisure time activity Reading is closely connected with literacy and education. From.
McGraw-Hill © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights reserved. THE DYNAMICS OF MASS COMMUNCATION Joseph R. Dominick University of Georgia--Athens.
Books as Technology: What do you need to create a mass produced book? 1. Language: a common set of meanings 2. Writing: from pictographs to alphabet 3..
Books: The Durable Medium Chapter Outline  History  Industry  Controversies.
Printing Volti Chapter 11. Printing Of all technologies, perhaps none have had the greatest impact as printing Of all technologies, perhaps none have.
Impact of Printing & Books on Society Media History.
Evolution of Writing and Printing. Evolution of the Pictograph In the 1000 B.C. era, Egyptian Hieroglyphs evolved into the first alphabet. Scribed on.
CMM 201 Foundations of Mass Communication 1 BOOKS Chapter Four.
A History in Mass Communication
AFRICAN LITERATURE: Courage in Rising above all challenges
Books and the Power of Print Chapter 2. Books in the beginning “Books—the oldest mass medium—survive because they originate some of the biggest ideas.
Books! Your blue book states – “Books are the most personal mass medium”
NOTE: To change the image on this slide, select the picture and delete it. Then click the Pictures icon in the placeholder to insert your own image. THE.
The Printing Press Most Important Invention in History?
3 Months Prior 2 Months Prior 1 Month Prior 1 Week Prior LAUNCH DAY
Books: The Durable Medium
BOOKS Chapter 10.
Books: The Birth of the Mass Media
Books And the power of print.
The Printing Press.
Yellow Pages Training Building a better understanding of the Yellow Pages industry to achieve greater success in Newspaper Sales.
Books The original mass media. Books The original mass media.
Illuminated Manuscripts: beautiful but oh so time consuming…
Chapter 3: Books and Magazines
Functions of Books Transmission of Culture (religious texts, etiquette books, even travel guides) Transmit Ideas and Knowledge (textbooks and non-fiction.
Sectors of the media industry
What is “culture”? One approach:
Magazines.
The History of Printing
POST-CLASSICAL HOLLYWOOD
Print.
Six Information Revolutions
Magazines: Targeting the Audience Click here to return to JOUR 4000
BOOKS Chapter 10.
Renaissance, Reformation, Scientific Revolution, and the Enlightenment
Media, Multimedia & Digital Media
AUPS MUST BE SIGNED AND RETURNED NOW
Renaissance: Influence
Crown and Griffin Books
Crown and Griffin Books
Johannes Gutenberg And his Printing Press
Journalism Principles and Practices
E-Commerce Models: Online & Offline Distribution of MM
Presentation transcript:

Print

Debate Books have no relevance in today’s media Pick a side and write a paragraph with 3 points and support. Topic Sentence > Point 1 > support > Point 2 > Support > Point 3 > Support > Conclusion Ex. Books still have relevance because they can be used to start fires. Books are made of paper and paper is easy to burn.

Books The original mass media

What is a book? Every medium has it’s own unique characteristics What is it about a book that gives it value compared to the other media?

Characteristics of books Linear Words and sentences follow each other to build meaning

Characteristics of Books Uniform Every Book of the same title has the same content This is thanks to the nature of the printing press Before stories were handed down and could change by storyteller or handwritten copy

Characteristics of books Permanent Records Printed words are permanent Allows us to understand points in time and word origins However, while the world changes, books stay the same So they aren’t very relevant to current events http://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=swag&year_start=1700&year_end=2008&corpus=0&smoothing=3

Characteristics of books Portable and durable Easy to transport Also they are very durable due to their materials Don’t require a power source

Characteristics of Books Low entry barrier While there is some major publishing conglomerates that control a lot of the content There are also many options to circumvent the system Desktop publishing Smaller specialized publishing houses

Advantages What are the advantages of books over other media? What are the disadvantages?

Types of Books Novels – Book length fictional works Almanac – book-length collection of useful facts, calendars, and advice Audio books – printed books narrated onto cd

Types of books Fiction Classics Fantasy Mystery Romance Thrillers Sci-Fi Western

Types of book and Genres Non-Fiction Art Biography Cooking Entertainment History Reference Sports

Types of Books Children’s books Textbooks Young Adult Graphic Novels Audio E-books

Letters with little Curlycues on the end Sans-Serif Straight letters typography Serif Letters with little Curlycues on the end Sans-Serif Straight letters

History Before books as we know them stories were passed down by word of mouth After the invention paper, information was written in the form of scrolls Eventually they took on the form we recognize today

Pre-books Papyrus – Created by the Egyptians around 2400 B.C. Made from plant reeds along the Nile river Papyrus was rolled into scrolls Parchment – Treated animal skin Replaced Papyrus and was used by majority of Europeans up until the 13th century Parchment was more durable than paper Paper – Created in China around 105 A.D. Paper was cheaper than parchment and would help to spread books to a wide audience

Manuscript Culture The period in which books had to be hand written and hand bound Priests and Monks wrote the worlds books by hand They were known as scribes Because of this, most books were religious or philosophical

Pre- Printing Press Available to only the best educated elites Written mostly in Latin Government feared the spread of literacy Books are rare and expensive

Printing Press Earliest Printing Presses dated around 1051 in China Around 1234 movable type appeared in Korea Failed to evolve and be widely adopted due to the complexities of the Asian Language (40,000 characters in China)

Gutenberg Press In 1450 Johannes Gutenberg invented his movable type Printing Press in Europe First major book to be printed was the bible

Books Part 2

Print in America American Print like other countries began with religious texts The Bay Psalm Book was the first printed in America in 1644 Literacy was high in the colonies Ben Franklin was one of the prominent printers in the new world 1732 he printed his Poor Richard’s Almanack Also printed Thomas Paine’s Common Sense Political Pamphlet that supported Independence

Print in early America Religious and Government works Lack of diversity Printing was done with permission of colonial governors Criticism of the government was never allowed Printers were jailed for printing criticism of the Government

Stamp Act Stamp act was a tax to recoup money spent on the French and Indian War All printing must have a government stamp It allowed for greater control of the message and limited expression by the colonies Printers openly revolted and printed books and pamphlets critical of the crown Thomas Paine’s Common Sense was the most famous of these works

Post Revolution Books still expensive for masses (weeks pay) Newspapers grew quickly but books growth was slower Compulsory education helped growth (by 1900) Literacy rose and demand rose In 1861 the US had the highest literacy rate in the world 58%, by 1900 it was at 90%

Rise of the book industry In the mid-1800s publishers began to print paperback novels Dime Novels and Pulp Fiction Paperbacks transformed books into a true mass medium Many youth took these Novels with them to WWII When they returned, many attended college on the GI Bill This caused a higher demand for textbooks

Publishing houses Publishing houses are the organizations that supervise the overall production of books Development of new books Editing Printing Marketing

The Book Market today 80% of US books are sold by 5 companies Big Six five of Publishing Simon & Schuster (CBS) Hachette HarperCollins (NewsCorp) Random House/Penguin Group MacMillan http://www.nytimes.com/best-sellers-books/overview.html

Market Breakdown 30% textbooks 25% Reference Titles 45% Consumer Content $40.32 Billion in 2008

Censorship Books are a constant target for censorship In schools and Libraries, these complaints usually are initiated by a parent objection Should we be allowed to tell our schools and libraries what they should purchase?

Banned Books Harry Potter Captain Underpants Hunger Games Twilight Huckleberry Finn Of Mice and Men Catcher in the Rye

Book Burnings

Books and the box office $7.7 billion in worldwide box office $7.7 billion in Book sales $24 billion in sales

Facts about books Americans buy 4 books per year on average 47% of adults read literature Literary readership has declined 30% over the past 20 years for young adults

Future of Books E-books are on the rise Amazon has become the leader in e-book distribution Apple is moving into the market E-books vs. real books Discuss

E-books More Portable Instant purchasing from home Less entry barriers Gives new life to out of print books Greener? Requires power Do you own E-books? Can you Share E-books?

E-books Computer text is said to be harder to read 60% slower Libraries are beginning to offer e-books

Timeline

Most influential books Read a selection for 5 minutes After write 2-3 sentences about your thoughts and attitudes about the book after your five minute reading 2 minutes to write then we’ll rotate tables

Books are not dependent on large audiences like other media Allows books to be more diverse and risky Not dependent on advertisers Corporations have no say unlike other media

Aliteracy – someone has the ability to read but refuses to do so 30% of 13 year olds read every day 15-24 spend 7 to 10 minutes a day reading 50% of 18-24 never RFP

1 million new titles and editions are published in the US per year 2008 Americans bought 3.1 billion new books with book industry revenues of 40.32 Billion

Trade books – books that are for mass consumers Trade books – books that are for mass consumers. These include fiction and non-fiction works Professional Books – Reference and educational books for professionals in an industry (doctors, lawyers, marketers, scientists, etc.) Textbooks – Books published specifically for education

Amazon and book stores

Questions for review