…that The Late Age of Print makes an excellent course text? With chapters on Harry Potter, Amazon.com, e-books, Oprah’s Book Club, and more, it’s chock full of relatable material for college undergraduates. Graduate students will appreciate the subject matter, too, along with the rich theoretical and historical context the book provides. If you teach courses on any of the following topics, then you might want to consider adopting Late Age:
- Media History
- Literary History
- History of Technology
- Communication History
- Book History
- History of Reading
- History of Literacy
- History of Print
- New Media
- Cultural Studies
- Popular Culture
- Everyday Life
- Digital Humanities
If you teach a class using The Late Age of Print that’s not listed here, I’d love to hear from you! I’ll be sure to add it to the roster.
And, in other important news, don’t forget that ONLY SIX DAYS REMAIN to <a title="Download The Late Age of Print" href="http://www additional resources.thelateageofprint.org/download”>download the e-edition of Late Age for the small “price” of a tweet or Facebook Post. Yeah, for real. Do it before time runs out!
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