1. The phrase "reading revolution" was probably coined by German historian Rolf Engelsing. He certainly made it popular. Engelsing was trying to describe something he saw in the 18th century: a shift from "intensive" reading and re-reading of very few texts to "extensive" reading of many, often only once
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in title, tags, annotations or urlMettre Wikipédia dans son CV académique - Notes d'un économiste - 0 views
10 Reading Revolutions Before E-Books - Science and Tech - The Atlantic - 0 views
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other historians quickly found counterexamples of extensive premodern reading (Cicero and his letters) and intensive reading today
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2. Outside of scholarly circles, the top candidate is usually the better-known Print Revolution, usually associated with Johannes Gutenberg, who helped introduce movable type to Europe. Now, as Andrew Pettegree's new history The Book in the Renaissance shows, the early years of print were much messier than advertised: no one knew quite what to do with this technology, especially how to make money off of it.
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Nicholas Carr sur la veille et la surcharge informationnelle « bibliothecaire ? - 0 views
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« It’s not information overload. It’s filter failure. » / « Ce n’est pas une surcharge d’informations, c’est une défaillance des filtres. »
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Pour défendre sa thèse Carr pose une distinction entre « situational overload » et « ambient overload ».
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Au contraire de la surcharge « environnementale ». Ici ce n’est plus de l’information (l’aiguille) définie a priori que nous allons chercher sur le réseau mais à l’inverse de l’information qui vient vers nous depuis le réseau (push vs. pull), par le biais des flux de syndication notamment, mais aussi des alertes, des lettres d’informations, etc., des outils de veille en général.
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