Samuel Johnson and the Impact of Print: (Originally published as Printing Technology, Letters, and Samuel Johnson)
By (Author) Alvin B. Kernan
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
29th January 1990
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: general
828.609
Paperback
375
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
397g
'Writing as he does with energy and grace, Kernan is a thoughtful guide to the world Johnson lived in and helped to make...What is best about Kernan's book is that it is up to date but not voguish; he has assimilated new scholarship but not been overpowered by it.' - W.B. Carnochan, The Times Literary Supplement
"Writing as he does with energy and grace, Kernan is a thoughtful guide to the world Johnson lived in and helped to make... What is best about Kernan's book is that it is up to date but not voguish; he has assimilated new scholarship but not been overpowered by it."--W. B. Carnochan, The Times Literary Supplement "Kernan's work is deeply informed and thoughtful, not reductionist but relationist. He does not pretend that print was the direct cause of all the changes he discusses, but shows rather how many or most of the changes relate in one way or another to print, are intertwined with it... Kernan's book is rich and rewarding... There was a dark side to Johnson's awarenesses that frequently shows, and Kernan ... has rightly brought it to our attention."--Walter J. Ong, Review "Kernan picks up the image of Johnson where recent biographers left off. Samuel Johnson, he sums up, was 'skeptical, deeply troubled in mind, mad at times, neurotic nearly always, radically doubtful of himself and of the social values he at the same time so stoutly defended.' To that 'existential Johnson,' Kernan adds an image of Johnson as a model of success in the emergent print culture. This makes for fascinating reading."--Thomas D'Evelyn, The Christian Science Monitor