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The Social Life of Ink
The Social Life of Ink: Culture Wonder And Our Relationship With The Written Word | Ted Bishop
4 posts | 2 read | 5 to read
A rich and imaginative discovery of how ink has shaped culture and why it is here to stay Ink is so much a part of daily life that we take it for granted, yet its invention was as significant as the wheel. Ink not only recorded culture, it bought political power, divided peoples, and led to murderous rivalries. Ancient letters on a page were revered as divine light, and precious ink recipes were held secret for centuries. And, when it first hit markets not so long ago, the excitement over the disposable ballpoint pen equalled that for a new smartphonewith similar complaints to the manufacturers. Curious about its impact on culture, literature, and the course of history, Ted Bishop sets out to explore the story of ink. From Budapest to Buenos Aires, he traces the lives of the innovators who created the ballpoint penrevolutionary technology that still requires exact engineering today. Bishop visits a ranch in Utah to meet a master ink-maker who relishes igniting linseed oil to make traditional printers ink. In China, he learns that ink can be an exquisite object, the subject of poetry, and a means of strengthening (or straining) family bonds. And in the Middle East, he sees the worlds oldest Quran, stained with the blood of the caliph who was assassinated while reading it. An inquisitive and personal tour around the world, The Social Life of Ink asks us to look more closely at something we see so often that we dont see it at all.
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Tianarose
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100 books already! Wowzers! Thanks for the help COVID

britt_brooke Woohoo!! 🙌🏻 4y
Birdsong28 Congratulations 🎊 🎉 📚 📖 4y
Tianarose @Birdsong28 thanks, have to say I adore your profile picture! 4y
Birdsong28 @Tianarose Thanks 😊 4y
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blurb
Tianarose
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“All writing defines a negative space, a space not of absence but of plenitude. The work you‘re reading is simply black marks on a page. The text that derives from it takes shape in the mind. This all texts are shaped by experience and context, and are always different, even for the same reader: it is a truism that you can never dip into the same book twice. The ink gestures toward that which transcends it.”

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Lindy
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The work you're reading is simply black marks on a page. The text that derives from it takes shape in the mind. Thus all texts are shaped by experience and context, and are always different, even for the same reader.

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Lindy
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I sure do love sweeping social histories of a single thing. Learning new stuff through this sort of book is my idea of bliss. For example, making your own ink from scratch involves an initial step of spontaneous combustion. (I won't try this at home.) The correct ink formulation was as great a stumbling block as the mechanics involved in the invention of ball point pens. Part micro-history, part memoir, part travel writing, all good. #Canadian

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