Print culture, as the call for this issue suggests, has dominated the world for 500 years, but also suggests that print's hegemony may now be under threat from new communications technologies. There are a number of perspectives from which to view the 'threats' to which print culture is subject, the longer term effects this will have and, particularly, on what it will mean to be human in the future of print culture. I'd like to address this issue by turning my attention to one dimension of this question that seems essentially absent from the discourses which surround it. I'd like to step back and put this question in the context of the structural relations of print as a cultural technology. My questions concern what these structural relations and their effects are, the limits of this print model of textuality, and what would constitute an 'outside' to the print system of texts. The point of this is to expose the 'naturalised' elements of this cultural formation, to show that there is as yet no radical break from print culture, and to consider the nature of the current pressures on print culture.
Funding
Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)