Printing and Prophecy: Prognostication and Media Change 1450-1550
examines prognostic traditions and late medieval prophetic texts in
the first century of printing and their effect on the new medium of
print. The many prophetic and prognostic works that followed
Europe's earliest known printed book—not the Gutenberg Bible, but
the Sibyl's Prophecy, printed by Gutenberg two years earlier and
known today only from a single page� over the next century were
perennial best sellers for many printers, and they provide the
modern observer with a unique way to study the history and inner
workings of the print medium. The very popularity of these works,
often published as affordable booklets, raised fears of social
unrest. Printers therefore had to meet customer demand while at the
same time channeling readers' reactions along approved paths.
Authors were packaged -- and packaged themselves -- in word and
image to respond to the tension, while leading figures of early
modern culture such as Paracelsus, Martin Luther, and Sebastian
Brant used printed prophecies for their own purposes in a rapidly
changing society.
Based on a wide reading of many sources, Printing and Prophecy
contributes to the study of early modern literature, including how
print changed the relationship among authors, readers, and texts.
The prophetic and astrological texts the book examines document
changes in early modern society that are particularly relevant to
German studies and are key texts for understanding the development
of science, religion, and popular culture in the early modern
period. By combining the methods of cultural studies and book
history, this volume brings a new perspective to the study of
Gutenberg and later printers.