CBSE Class 10 Social Science Print Culture And Modern World Notes

Download CBSE Class 10 Social Science Print Culture And Modern World Notes in PDF format. All Revision notes for Class 10 Social Science have been designed as per the latest syllabus and updated chapters given in your textbook for Social Science in Class 10. Our teachers have designed these concept notes for the benefit of Class 10 students. You should use these chapter wise notes for revision on daily basis. These study notes can also be used for learning each chapter and its important and difficult topics or revision just before your exams to help you get better scores in upcoming examinations, You can also use Printable notes for Class 10 Social Science for faster revision of difficult topics and get higher rank. After reading these notes also refer to MCQ questions for Class 10 Social Science given on studiestoday

Revision Notes for Class 10 Social Science India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World

Class 10 Social Science students should refer to the following concepts and notes for India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World in Class 10. These exam notes for Class 10 Social Science will be very useful for upcoming class tests and examinations and help you to score good marks

India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World Notes Class 10 Social Science

class_10_science_concept_9

Main Points

 Invention of Printing Press had a very lasting effect on the social and cultural life of man
 Print initially developed East Asia and later developed through Europe and India.
 Before the era of print or invention of Printing Press, writing of books was poorly manual affair.
 Books were handwritten and even illustrated.
 Calligraphy developed as an art during that era.
 Calligraphy means the art of beautiful and stylish writing.

• Printed Matter Chinese Tradition: Chinese were the first to have a system of recruitment of civil service personal through open examination.

 Printing remained confined to examination materials till around the 16th century.
 Trade information was circulated among the traders through printed materials.
 By 19th century mechanical printing press made their appearance in China
 The First Printing Press was invented in 1430s by Johann Gutenberg
 Johann Gutenberg’s Bible was the most beautiful books ever printed.
 Germany took the lead in revolutionizing printing all over Europe.
 The new Print Technology revolutionized the way knowledge came to be spread among the peoples. Printed books were now affordable for a much wider section of the society.
 Power driven Cylindrical Press could print up to 8000 sheets in an hour.
 Invention of Offset Printing.
 Use of electrically operated printing machines
 Use of Paper reels in place of paper sheets and photo electric control of colour register.
 Advertisement and posters were also printed.
 Publication of cheap series of books.
 India and Print Culture
 Print culture came to India with the coming of Portuguese missionaries. Konkani was the first Indian language in which books were printed.
 The first Tamil book printed was printed in 1579 and Malayalam book in 1713.
 English printing in India commenced with the publication of Bengal Gazette in 1780.
 Printed tracts played a very significant role in the spread of social reform movement in India
 Popular Prints-The Calendars and Cartoons
 Printed pictures mostly portrayed Gods and Goddesses
 Printed Material specially for women
 Books for Workers-Industrialization and invention of machines popularized printed books.
 Control on Circulation of Printed Literature- Control on the freedom of press was first introduced in 1820 by the Calcutta Supreme Court.
 Thomas Macaulay played a very important role in withdrawing restrictions on press.
 During the period of freedom struggle British Rulers restricted the freedom of the press.

The Print Revolution and its Impact.

1. Printing press, a new reading public emerged. Reduced the cost of books, now a reading public came into being.

2. Knowledge was transferred orally. Before the age of print books were not only expensive but they could not be produced in sufficient numbers.

3. But the transition was not so simple. Books could be read only by the literate and the rates of literary in most European crematories were very low, Oral culture thus entered print and printed material was orally transmitted. And the hearing public and reading public became intermingled.

Religious Debates and the fear of Print.

1. Print created the possibility of wide circulation of ideas.

2. Through the printed message, they could persuade people to think differently and introduced a new world of debate and discussion. This had significance in different sphere of life.

3. Many were apprehensive of the effects that the easier access to the printed world and the wider circulation of books, could have on people’s minds.

4. If that happened the authority of ‘valuable’ literature would be destroyed, expressed by religious authorities and monarchs, as well as many writers and artists, achievement of religion areas of Martin Luther.

5. A new intellectual atmosphere and helped spread the new ideas that led to the reformation.

Print culture and the French Revolution :

1. Print popularized the ideas of the enlightenment thinkers. Collectively, their writings provided a critical connmentary or tradition, superstition and despotism.

2. Print created a new culture of dialogue and debate. All values, forms and institutions were re-evaluated and discussed by a public that had become aware of the power of reason.

3. 1780’s there was an outpouring of literature that mocked the royalty and criticised their morality. In the process, it raised questions about the existing social order.

4. The print helps the spread of ideas. People did not read just one kind of literature. If they read the ideas of Voltaire and Rousseau, They were also exposed to monarchic and church propaganda.

5. Print did not directly shape their minds, but it did open up the possibility of thinking differently.

The Nineteenth Century (Women)

1. As primary education became compulsory from the late nineteenth century. A large numbers of new readers were especially women.

2. Women became important as readers as well as writers. Penny magazines were especially meant for women, as were manuals treaching proper behaviour and house keeping.

3. In the nineteenth century, lending libraries in England, lower middle class people. Sometimes self educated working class people wrote for themselves. Women were seen as important readers. Some of the best known novelists were women : Jane Austin, the Bronte sisters, George Eliot. their writings became important in defining a new type of woman.

 

SHORT ANSWERS TYPE QUESTIONS 

Q.1 - :Explain any three features of handwritten manuscripts before the age of print in India?
• They were copied on palm leaves or on handmade papers.
• Pages were beautifully illustrated.
• They were pressed between wooden covers or sewn together to ensure preservation.
• Manuscripts were available in vernacular languages.
• Highly expensive & fragile.
• They could not read easily as the script was written in different styles.
• They were not widely used in everyday life.

Q.2 - :Why did the wood block method become popular in Europe?
• Production of handwritten manuscripts could not meet the ever increasing demand for books.
• Copying was an expensive, laborious and time consuming business.
• The manuscripts were fragile, awkward to handle and could not be carried around or read easily .
• By the early 15th century, woodblocks started being widely used in Europe to print textiles, playing cards and religious pictures with simple, brief texts.

Q.3 - :What was the role of new ’visual image ‘culture in printing in India?
• At the end of the 19th century a new visual culture had started.
• With the increasing number of printing presses visual images could be easily reproduced in multiple copies.
• Painters like Raja Ravi Varma produced images for mass circulation.
• Cheap prints and calendars were brought even by the poor to decorate the walls of their houses.

Q.4 - :Print popularized the ideas of the enlightenment thinkers “.Explain .
• Collectively the writings of thinkers provided a critical commentary on tradition, superstition and despotism.
• Scholars and thinkers argued for the rule of reason rather than custom and demanded that everything to be judged through the application of reason and rationality.
• They attacked the sacred authority of the church and the despotic power of the state thus eroding the legitimacy of a social order based on tradition .
• The writing of Voltaire and Rousseau was read widely and those who read these books saw the world through new eyes, eyes that were questioning critical and rational.

Q5 .Describe any three factors which contributed to the development of print technology.
• Handwritten manuscripts could not meet the increasing demand for books
• Manuscripts were fragile, difficult handle
• Wood block printing, brought from China gradually became more popular.
• Johann Gutenberg developed the first -known printing in1430s

5 Mark Questions

Q.1 - :How print revolution led to the development of reading mania in Europe .
• As literacy and schools spread in European countries there was a virtual reading mania.
• A new forms of popular literature appeared to target new readers
• There were ritual calendars along with ballads and folk tales.
• In England penny chapbooks were carried by petty peddlers known as Chapman and sold for a Penny, so that even the poor could buy them.
• In France these low priced books were called Bibliotheque Bleue as they were bound in cheap blue covers.
• There were romances, histories, books of various sixes, serving developed to combine information on current affairs with entertainment.
• Periodical pressed developed to combine information on current affairs with entertainment.
• The idea of scientists and scholars had now become more accessible to the common people.

Q.2 - :How did oral culture enter print and how was the printed material transmitted orally? Explain Oral culture entered print into the following ways –
• Printers published popular ballads and folktales .
• Books were profusely illustrated with pictures .Printed material was transmitted orally in the following ways .
• These were sung at gatherings in villages, taverns and in towns .
• They were recited in public gatherings .

Q.3 - :Explain the impact of print on Indian women .
• Writers started writing about the lives and features of women and this increased the number of women readers.
• Women writers wrote their own autobiography. They highlighted the condition of women, their ignorance and how they forced to do hard domestic labour.
• A large section of Hindu writing was devoted to the education of women.
• In the early 20th century the journals written by women become very popular in which
women’s education, widowhood, widow remarriage was discussed.
• Many writers published how to teach women to be obedient wives.

Q.4 - :By the end of the 19th century a new visual culture was taking shape .Write any three features of this new visual culture .
• Visual images could be easily reproduced in multiple copies.
• Printers produced images for mass circulation cheap prints and calendars could be brought even by the poor.
• By the 1870’s caricatures and cartoons were being published in journals and newspapers.
• Mass production of cost and visual images reduced the cost of production. So cheap prints and calendars were available in the market even for the poor to decorate the walls of their homes.

Q.5’ - :Many Historians have argued that print culture created the conditions within which the French Revolution occurred ‘.Explain .
• The print popularized the ideas of the enlightened thinkers who attacked the authority of the church and the despotic power of the state.
• The print created a new culture of dialogue and debate and the public become aware of reasoning. They recognized the need to question the existing ideas and beliefs.
• The literature of 1780’s mocked the royalty and criticized their morality and the existing social order. This literature led to the growth of hostile
• Sentiments against.

1. Give reasons for the following :
a .Woodblock print only came to Europe after 1295 .Marco Polo returned to Italy from China and brought with him the knowledge of woodblock printing .
b. Martin Luther was in favour of print and spoke out in praise of it .Martin Luther‘s criticism of Roman Catholic Church reached a large section of masses because of print .Hence he was in favour of print and spoke out in praise of it .
c. The Roman Catholic Church began keeping an Index of Prohibited books from the mid-sixteenth century .Because of print new interpretation of Bible reached to people and they started questioning the authority of church .Due to this the Roman Catholic Church began keeping and index of Prohibited books from the mid – sixteenth century .
d.Gandhiji said the fight for Swaraj is a fight for liberty of speech, liberty of the press,and freedom of association .
The power of the printed word is most often seen in the way governments seek to regulate and suppress print .The colonial government kept continuous track of all books and newspapers published in India and passed numerous laws to control the press .Because of this Gandhi said the fight for Swaraj is a fight for liberty of speech, liberty of the press, and freedom of association .

2 .Write short notes to show what you know about :

a.The Gutenberg Press
Answer: Gutenberg was the son of a merchant and grew up on a large agricultural estate .From his childhood he had seen wine and olive presses .Subsequently, he learnt the art of polishing stones, became a master goldsmith, and also acquired the expertise to create lead moulds used for making trinkets .Drawing on this knowledge, Gutenberg adapted existing technology to design his innovation .The olive press provided the model for the printing press, and moulds were used for casting the metal types for the letters of the alphabet .By 1448, Gutenberg perfected the system .The first book he printed was the Bible .About 180 copies were printed and it took three years to produce them .By the standards of the time this was fast production .

b. Erasmus‘s idea of the printed book
Answer: Erasmus thought that books were not good for sanctity of scholastic knowledge .He was of the opinion that printed books would glut the market with contents which will do more harm than good to society .Because of this the value of good content would be lost in the din.

c .The Vernacular Press Act
Answer:
In 1878, the Vernacular Press Act was passed, modeled on the Irish Press Laws .It provided the government with extensive rights to censor reports and editorials in the vernacular press .From now on the government kept regular track of the vernacular newspapers published in different provinces .When a report was judged as seditious, the Newspaper was warned, and if the warning was ignored, the press was liable to be seized and the printing machinery confiscated .

3 .What did the spread of print culture in nineteenth century India mean to :
a. Women
Answer: Because of printing technique books became cheaper .Many hawkers started selling books from door to door .This created easy availability of books for majority of women .Apart from this many liberal males encouraged women from their families to read .Novels contained interesting descriptions of women‘s lives .This created interest among women readers .Women, who were earlier cocooned inside their homes, could now know about the outside world thanks to the print technology .This created a spurt of many women writers in India .It can be said that print culture not only created readers among women but also writers among them .

b . The poor
Answer: Very cheap small books were brought to markets in nineteenth -century Madras towns and sold at crossroads, allowing poor people traveling to markets to buy them. Public libraries were set up from the early twentieth century, expanding the access to books . From the late nineteenth century, issues of caste discrimination began to be written about in many printed tracts and essays .This helped in bringing these issues to the forefront of public consciousness .Workers in factories were too overworked and lacked the education to write much about their experiences .But some workers took initiative to write stories about their conditions .
These narratives contained issues related to class oppression .So worker‘s problems also came to the fore .

c .Reformers
Answer: From the early nineteenth century there were intense debates around religious issues . Different groups confronted the changes happening within colonial society in different ways, and offered a variety of new interpretations of the beliefs of different religions .Some criticized existing practices and campaigned for reform, while others countered the arguments of reformers .These debates were carried out in public and in print .Printed tracts and newspapers not only spread the new ideas, but they shaped the nature of the debate.A wider public could now participate in these public discussions and express their views .New ideas emerged through these clashes of opinions .
This was a time of intense controversies between social and religious reformers and the Hindu orthodoxy over matters like widow immolation, monotheism, Brahmanical priesthood and idolatry .In Bengal, as the debate developed, tracts and newspapers proliferated, circulating a variety of arguments .To reach a wider audience, the ideas were printed in the everyday, spoken language of ordinary people.

PRINT CULTURE AND THE MODERN WORLD 

Q1. Where was the earliest kind of print technology developed?
Ans. The earliest kind of print technology was developed in China, Japan and Korea. 

Q2. Briefly describe the earliest kind of print technology that developed in the world
Ans.The earliest kind of print technology was based on manual labourie hand print in From AD 594 onwards, books in China were printed by rubbing paper – also invented there – against the inked surface of woodblocks. As both sides of the thin, porous sheet could not be printed, the traditional Chinese ‘accordion book’ was folded and stitched at the side. Superbly skilled craftsmen could duplicate, with remarkable accuracy, the beauty of calligraphy. 

Q4. What is Calligraphy?
Ans.The art of beautiful and stylized writing is known as Calligraphy 

Q5.Which country was the major producer of printed material? Why?
Ans.The imperial state in China was, for a very long time, the major producer of printed material. 

HUGE BUREAUCRATIC SYSTEM
China possessed a huge bureaucratic system which recruited its personnel through civil service examinations. 

PRINTING OF TEXTBOOKS
Text books for this examination were printed in vast numbers under the sponsorship of the imperial state. 

INCREASE IN THE NUMBER OF CANDIDATES
From the sixteenth century, the number of examination candidates went up and that increased the volume of print. 

China – Printing of Books 

Q6 How did the uses of print diversify in China
Ans. By the seventeenth century, as urban culture bloomed in China, the uses of print diversified. Print was no longer used just by scholar officials 

TO COLLECT TRADE INFORMATION
Merchants used print in their everyday life, as they collected trade information. 

READING
* Reading increasingly became a leisure activity.
* The new readership preferred fictional narratives, poetry, autobiographies, anthologies of literary masterpieces, and romantic plays. 

PUBLISHING
 Rich women began to read, and many women began publishing their poetry and plays.
 Wives of scholar-officials published their works and courtesans wrote about their lives.
 Western printing techniques and mechanical presses were imported in the late nineteenth  century as Western powers established their
 outposts in China.
 Shanghai became the hub of the new print culture, catering to the Western-style schools.
 From hand printing there was now a gradual shift to mechanical printing. 

Print in Japan 

Q7.Who introduced print in Japan ?
Ans. Buddhist missionaries from China introduced hand-printing technology into Japan around AD 768-770. 

Q8 Name the oldest book to be printed in Japan.
Ans. The oldest Japanese book, printed in AD 868, is the Buddhist Diamond Sutra, containing six sheets of text and woodcut illustrations.

Briefly describe the various kinds of print used in Japan.
 Pictures were printed on textiles, playing cards and paper money.
 In medieval Japan, poets and prose writers were regularly published, and books were cheap and abundant. 

Q.9 What were the interesting publishing practices of the late 18th century?
Ans.
• Printing of visual material led to interesting publishing practices.
 In the late eighteenth century, in the flourishing urban circles at Edo (later to be known as Tokyo), illustrated collections of paintings depicted an elegant urban culture, involving artists, courtesans, and teahouse gatherings.
 Libraries and bookstores were packed with hand-printed material of various types – books on women, musical instruments, calculations, tea ceremony, flower arrangements, proper etiquette, cooking and famous places.

PRINT CULTURE IN EUROPE 

Q.10 What were the factors that helped the rise of print culture in Europe?
Ans.
 In the eleventh century, Chinese paper reached Europe via the silk route.
 Paper made possible the production of manuscripts, carefully written by scribes.
 Then, in 1295, Marco Polo, a great explorer, returned to Italy after many years of exploration in China. China already had the technology of woodblock printing. Marco Polo brought this knowledge back with him.
 Now Italians began producing books with woodblocks, and soon the technology spread to other parts of Europe.
 Luxury editions were still handwritten on very expensive vellum, meant for aristocratic circles and rich monastic libraries which scoffed at printed books as cheap vulgarities.
 Merchants and students in the university towns bought the cheaper printed copies.

Q11.What is vellum?
Ans.A parchment made from the skins of animals.

Q12 How were luxury editions in Europe printed ?
Ans.Luxury editions were handwritten on very expensive vellum meant for aristocratic people and rich monastic libraries.

Q13 Who were the people who brought cheaper copies?
Ans.Merchants and students in the university towns bought cheaper printed copies.

Demand For Books 

Q14 What steps were taken by the booksellers to meet the increasing demand for books?
Ans.
• 
As the demand for books increased, booksellers all over Europe began exporting books to many different countries. Book fairs were held at different places.
 Production of handwritten manuscripts was also organised in new ways to meet the expanded demand.
 Scribes or skilled handwriters were no longer solely employed by wealthy or influential patrons but increasingly by booksellers as well. More than 50 scribes often worked for
one bookseller.

Q.15 What were the limitations of Manuscripts?
Ans.
 the production of handwritten manuscripts could not satisfy the ever-increasing demand for books.
 Copying was an expensive, laborious and time-consuming business.
 Manuscripts were fragile, awkward to handle, and could not be carried around or read easily.
 Their circulation remained limited. With the growing demand for books, woodblock printing gradually became more and more popular.
 By the early fifteenth century, woodblocks were being widely used in Europe to print textiles, playing cards, and religious pictures with simple, brief texts. 

PRINT REVOLUTION 

Q16. Explain the term Print Revolution
Ans.The shift from hand printing to mechanical printing led to the print revolution after he invention of the printing press by Gutenberg.

Q17. Which was the first book to be printed by Gutenberg
Ans.The first book he printed was the Bible. About 180 copies were printed and it took three years to produce them. By the standards of the time this was fast production.

Q18 Write a short note on Gutenberg
Ans.
 Gutenberg was the son of a merchant and grew up on a large agricultural estate. From his childhood he had seen wine and olive presses.
 Subsequently, he learnt the art of polishing stones, became a master goldsmith, and also acquired the expertise to create lead moulds used for making trinkets.
 Gutenberg adapted existing technology to design his innovation.
 The olive press provided the model for the printing press, and moulds were used for casting the metal types for the letters of the alphabet.
 By 1448, Gutenberg perfected the system. The first book he printed was the Bible. About 180 copies were printed and it took three years to produce them. By the standards of the
time this was fast production. 

Q.19 What were the features of the printed books ?
Ans.
 Printed books at first closely resembled the written manuscripts in appearance and layout.
 The metal letters imitated the ornamental handwritten styles.
 Borders were illuminated by hand with foliage and other patterns, and illustrations were painted.
 In the books printed for the rich, space for decoration was kept blank on the printed page.
Each purchaser could choose the design and decide on the painting school that would do the illustrations.
 This shift from hand printing to mechanical printing led to the print revolution.

Q20 What was the impact of the print revolution in Europe?
Ans.A new way of producing books; it transformed the lives of people, changing their relationship to information and knowledge, and with institutions and authorities.
It influenced popular perceptions and opened up new ways of looking at things

1. EMERGENCE OF A NEW READING PUBLIc
 Printing reduced the cost of books. The time and labour required to produce each book came down, and multiple copies could be produced with greater ease.
 Books flooded the market, reaching out to an ever-growing readership.

2. EMERGENCE OF A HEARING PUBLIC
Earlier books could be read by only a small number of people particularly the elite as the number of literates in Europe was very low till the 20 th century
 Publishers started publishing popular ballads folk tales with beautiful pictures and illustrations .These were then sung at village gatherings Knowledge was transferred orally. People collectively heard a story, or saw a performance . Thus a hearing and reading public became intermingled.

3. RELIGIOUS DEBATES AND THE FEAR OF PRINT
 Print created the possibility of wide circulation of ideas, and introduced a new world of debate and discussion.
 Even those who disagreed with established authorities could now print and circulate their ideas. Eg MartinLuther was a German monk, priest professor and church reformer. In 1517
he wrote 95 thesis and openely criticized the rituals and practices of the Roman catholic church.A printed copy of his thesis was posted on the church door at Wittenberg. It challenged the church to debate his ideas. Lutherts writings were immediately produced in large numbersand were read widely. This led to division within the church and the beginning of the Protestant Reformation.

PRINT AND DISSENT
 Print and popular religious literature stimulated many distinctive individual interpretations of faith even among little-educated working people.
 In the sixteenth century, Manocchio, a miller in Italy, began to read books that were available in his locality.
 He reinterpreted the message of the Bible and formulated a view of God and Creation that enraged the Roman Catholic Church.
 When the Roman Church began its inquisition to repress heretical ideas, Manocchio was hauled up twice and ultimately executed.
 The Roman Church, troubled by such effects of popular readings and questionings of faith, imposed severe controls over publishers and booksellers and began to maintain an Index of Prohibited Books from 1558.

Q.21 What was the implication of Print Revolution on Religion?
Ans.
 In 1517, the religious reformer Martin Luther wrote Ninety Five Theses criticising many of the practices and rituals of the Roman Catholic Church.
 A printed copy of this was posted on a church door in Wittenberg.
 It challenged the Church to debate his ideas.
 Luther’s writings were immediately reproduced in vast numbers and read widely. This lead to a division within the Church and to the beginning of the Protestant Reformation.
The Reading Mania

Q22.Why is it that in the the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries literacy rates went up in most parts of Europe?
Ans.
 Churches of different denominations set up schools in villages, carrying literacy to peasants and artisans. By the end of the eighteenth century, in some parts of Europe literacy rates were as high as 60 to 80 per cent.
 As literacy and schools spread in European countries, there was a virtual reading mania.
 People wanted books to read and printers produced books in ever increasing numbers.

Q.23 What were the new forms of Popular Literature prevalent in Europe?(any 4)
Ans.
• New forms of popular literature appeared in print, targeting new audiences.
• Booksellers employed pedlars who roamed around villages, carrying little books for sale.
• There were almanacs or ritual calendars, along with ballads and folktales. But other forms of reading matter, largely for entertainment, began to reach ordinary readers as well.
• In England, penny chapbooks were carried by petty pedlars known as chapmen, and sold for a penny, so that even the poor could buy them.
• In France, were the ‘Biliotheque Bleue’, which were low-priced small books printed on poor quality paper, and bound in cheap blue covers.
• Then there were the romances, printed on four to six pages, and the more substantial ‘histories’ which were stories about the past.
• Books were of various sizes, serving many different purposes and interests.
• The periodical press developed from the early eighteenth century, combining information about current affairs with entertainment.
• Newspapers and journals carried information about wars and trade, as well as news of developments in other places.
• Similarly, the ideas of scientists and philosophers now became more accessible to the common people.
• Ancient and medieval scientific texts were compiled and published, and maps and scientific diagrams were widely printed. When scientists like Isaac Newton began to publish their discoveries, they could influence a much wider circle of scientifically minded readers.
• The writings of thinkers such as Thomas Paine, Voltaire and Jean Jacques Rousseau were also widely printed and read.
• Thus their ideas about science, reason and rationality found their way into popular literature.

Books – Enlightment

Q24 Why did some people in the eighteenth century Europe think that print culture would bring enlightenment and end despotism?
Ans. By the mid-eighteenth century, there was a common conviction that books were a means of spreading progress and enlightenment.
• Many believed that books could change the world, liberate society from despotism and tyranny, and herald a time when reason and intellect would rule.
• Louise-Sebastien Mercier, a novelist in eighteenth-century France, declared: ‘The printing press is the most powerful engine of progress and public opinion is the force that will sweep despotism away.’ In many of Mercier’s novels, the heroes are transformed by acts of reading. They devour books ,are lost in the world of books and become enlightened in the process, Mercier proclaimed “Tremble therefore tyrants of the world”Tremble before the virtual writer.

Q.25 What was the implication of print culture on the French Revolution?
Ans.
• First: print popularised the ideas of the Enlightenment thinkers
• Collectively, their writings provided a critical commentary on tradition, superstition and despotism.
• They argued for the rule of reason rather than custom, and demanded that everything be judged through the application of reason and rationality.
• They attacked the sacred authority of the Church and the despotic power of the state, thus eroding the legitimacy of a social order based on tradition. The writings of Voltaire and Rousseau were read widely; and those who read these books saw the world through new eyes, eyes that were questioning, critical and rational.
• Second: print created a new culture of dialogue and debate.
• All values, norms and institutions were re-evaluated and discussed by a public that had
become aware of the power of reason, and recognised the need to question existing ideas
and beliefs. Within this public culture, new ideas of social revolution came into being.
• Third: by the 1780s there was an outpouring of literature that mocked the royalty and criticised their morality.
• In the process, it raised questions about the existing social order.
• Cartoons and caricatures typically suggested that the monarchy remained absorbed only in sensual pleasures while the common people suffered immense hardships. This literature circulated underground and led to the growth of hostile sentiments against the monarchy.

Q.26 What was the impact of the Print Revolution on children, women and workers?
Ans.
CHILDREN
• As primary education became compulsory from the late nineteenth century, children became an important category of readers.
• Production of school textbooks became critical for the publishing industry.
• A children’s press, devoted to literature for children alone, was set up in France in 1857.This press published new works as well as old fairy tales and folk tales.
• The Grimm Brothers in Germany spent years compiling traditional folk tales gathered from peasants. What they collected was edited before the stories were published in a collection in 1812.
• Anything that was considered unsuitable for children or would appear vulgar to the elites, was not included in the published version.
• Rural folk tales thus acquired a new form. In this way, print recorded old tales but also changed them

WOMEN
• Penny magazines were especially meant for women, as were manuals teaching proper behaviour and housekeeping.
• When novels began to be written in the nineteenth century, women were seen as important readers. Some of the best known novelists were women: Jane Austen, the Bronte sisters, George Eliot
• Their writings became important in defining a new type of woman: a person with will, strength of personality, determination and the power to think Literacy – Workers
• Lending libraries had been in existence from the seventeenth century onwards.
• In the nineteenth century, lending libraries in England became instruments for educating white-collar workers, artisans and lower-middle-class people.
• Sometimes, self-educated working class people wrote for themselves.
• After the working day was gradually shortened from the mid-nineteenth century, workers had some time for self-improvement and self-expression.
• They wrote political tracts and autobiographies in large numbers.

Q27 What were the innovations in Print technology after the 18th century? (any 4)
Ans.
• By the late eighteenth century, the press came to be made out of metal. Through the nineteenth century, there were a series of further innovations in printing technology.
• By the mid-nineteenth century, Richard M. Hoe of New York had perfected the powerdriven cylindrical press. This was capable of printing 8,000 sheets per hour. This press was particularly useful for printing newspapers.
• In the late nineteenth century, the offset press was developed which could print up to six colours at a time.
• From the turn of the twentieth century, electrically operated presses accelerated printing operations. A series of other developments followed.
• Methods of feeding paper improved, the quality of plates became better, automatic paper reels and photoelectric controls of the colour register were introduced.
• The accumulation of several individual mechanical improvements transformed the appearance of printed texts. 

India and the World of Print

CASE STUDY INDIA

Q1. What were the important features of manuscripts in ancient India?
Ans.
• India had a very rich and old tradition of handwritten manuscripts – in Sanskrit, Arabic,Persian, as well as in various vernacular languages.
• Manuscripts were copied on palm leaves or on handmade paper.
• Pages were sometimes beautifully illustrated. They would be either pressed between wooden covers or sewn together to ensure preservation.
• Manuscripts continued to be produced till well after the introduction of print, down to the late nineteenth century.

Q2. What were the limitations of manuscript in ancient India?
Ans.
• Manuscripts, however, were highly expensive and fragile.
• They had to be handled carefully, and they could not be read easily as the script was written in different styles. So manuscripts were not widely used in everyday life.
• Even though pre-colonial Bengal had developed an extensive network of village primary schools, students very often did not read texts. They only learnt to write.
• Teachers dictated portions of texts from memory and students wrote them down.
• Many thus became literate without ever actually reading any kinds of texts. Print Comes to India

Q3.Give examples of the early books that were printed in India
Ans.
• The printing press first came to Goa with Portuguese missionaries in the mid-sixteenth century
• Jesuit priests learnt Konkani and printed several tracts. By 1674, about 50 books had been printed in the Konkani and in Kanara languages.
• Catholic priests printed the first Tamil book in 1579 at Cochin, and in 1713 the first Malayalam book was printed by them. By 1710, Dutch Protestant missionaries had printed 32 Tamil texts, many of them translations of older works.

Printing – Colonial Influence

Q4.Briefly describe the colonial influence on printing in India with the help of examples
Ans.
• From 1780, James Augustus Hickey began to edit the Bengal Gazette, a weekly magazine that described itself as ‘a commercial paper open to all, but influenced by none’. So it was private English enterprise, proud of its independence from colonial influence, that began English printing in India.
• Hickey published a lot of advertisements, including those that related to the import and sale of slaves. But he also published a lot of gossip about the Company’s senior officials in India. Enraged by this, Governor-General Warren Hastings persecuted Hickey, and encouraged the publication of officially sanctioned newspapers that could counter the flow of information that damaged the image of the colonial government.
• By the close of the eighteenth century, a number of newspapers and journals appeared in print.
• There were Indians, too, who began to publish Indian newspapers.
• The first to appear was the weekly Bengal Gazette, brought out by Gangadhar Bhattacharya, who was close to Rammohun Roy.

Q5.What were the implications of Print culture on the religious reforms in India?
Ans.
• From the early nineteenth century, there were intense debates around religious issues.
• Different groups confronted the changes happening within colonial society in different ways, and offered a variety of new interpretations of the beliefs of different religions.
• Some criticised existing practices and campaigned for reform, while others countered the
arguments of reformers. These debates were carried out in public and in print.
• Printed tracts and newspapers not only spread the new ideas, but they shaped the nature of the debate. A wider public could now participate in these public discussions and express their views.
• New ideas emerged through these clashes of opinions.
• This was a time of intense controversies between social and religious reformers and the Hindu orthodoxy over matters like widow immolation, monotheism, Brahmanical priesthood and idolatry. In Bengal, as the debate developed, tracts and newspapers proliferated, circulating a variety of arguments.
• To reach a wider audience, the ideas were printed in the everyday, spoken language of ordinary people. Rammohun Roy published the Sambad Kaumudi from 1821 and the Hindu orthodoxy commissioned the Samachar Chandrika to oppose his opinions. From 1822, two Persian newspapers were published, Jam-i-Jahan Nama and Shamsul Akhbar.In the same year, a Gujarati newspaper, the Bombay Samachar, made its appearance.

Q6. Why did the Muslim clergy want to introduce religious reforms in Islam?
Ans.
• In north India, the ulama were deeply anxious about the collapse of Muslim dynasties.
• They feared that colonial rulers would encourage conversion, change the Muslim personal laws.
• To counter this, they used cheap lithographic presses, published Persian and Urdu translations of holy scriptures, and printed religious newspapers and tracts.
• The Deoband Seminary, founded in 1867, published thousands upon thousands of fatwas telling Muslim readers how to conduct themselves in their everyday lives, and explaining the meanings of Islamic doctrines.

Q7 What were the implications of Print culture among the Hindus?
Ans.
• Among Hindus, too, print encouraged the reading of religious texts, especially in the vernacular languages.
• The first printed edition of the Ramcharitmanas of Tulsidas, a sixteenth-century text, came out from Calcutta in 1810. By the mid-nineteenth century, cheap lithographic editions flooded north Indian markets.
• From the 1880s, the Naval Kishore Press at Lucknow and the Shri Venkateshwar Press in Bombay published numerous religious texts in vernaculars. In their printed and portable form, these could be read easily by the faithful at any place and time.
• They could also be read out to large groups of illiterate men and women.

New Forms of Publication

Q8.Mention the new forms of publications in Indi
Ans.
• Printing created an appetite for new kinds of writing. As more and more people could now read, they wanted to see their own lives, experiences, emotions and relationships reflected in what they read.
• The novel, a literary firm which had developed in Europe, ideally catered to this need. It soon acquired distinctively Indian forms and styles. For readers, it opened up new worlds of experience, and gave a vivid sense of the diversity of human lives.
• Other new literary forms also entered the world of reading – lyrics, short stories, essays about social and political matters. In different ways, they reinforced the new emphasis on human lives and intimate feelings, about the political and social rules that shaped such things.

Q9 What was the effect of print technology on new visual culture?
Ans.
• With the setting up of an increasing number of printing presses, visual images could be easily reproduced in multiple copies.
• Painters like Raja Ravi Varma produced images for mass circulation.
• Cheap prints and calendars, easily available in the bazaar, could be bought even by the poor to decorate the walls of their homes or places of work.
• These prints began shaping popular ideas about modernity and tradition, religion and politics, and society and culture.

Caricatures and Cartoons
• By the 1870s, caricatures and cartoons were being published in journals and newspapers, commenting on social and political issues.
• Some caricatures ridiculed the educated Indians’ fascination with Western tastes and clothes, while others expressed the fear of social change.
• There were imperial caricatures lampooning nationalists, as well as nationalist cartoons criticizing imperial rule.

Q10 What was the effect of Print culture on the life of the women in India?
Ans.
• Lives and feelings of women began to be written in particularly vivid and intense ways.
• Women’s reading, therefore, increased enormously in middle-class homes. Liberal husbands and fathers began educating their womenfolk at home, and sent them to schools when women’s schools were set up in the cities and towns after the mid-nineteenth century.
• Many journals began carrying writings by women, and explained why women should be educated. They also carried a syllabus and attached suitable reading matter which could be used for home-based schooling.

Women Writers

Q11 What was the impct of print on women in India?
Ans.
Since social reforms and novels had already created a great interest in women’s lives and emotions, there was also an interest in what women would have to say about their own lives.
• From the 1860s, a few Bengali women like Kailashbashini Debi wrote books highlighting the experiences of women – about how women were imprisoned at home, kept in ignorance, forced to do hard domestic labour and treated unjustly by the very people they served.
• In the 1880s, in present-day Maharashtra, Tarabai Shinde and Pandita Ramabai wrote with passionate anger about the miserable lives of upper-caste Hindu women, especially widows.
• In the early twentieth century, journals, written for and sometimes edited by women, became extremely popular.
• They discussed issues like women’s education, widowhood, widow remarriage and the national movement.
• Some of them offered household and fashion lessons to women and brought entertainment through short stories and serialised novels.
• Liberal husbands nd fthers begn educting their womenol t homes nd sent them to schools when the women schoos opened up.

Q12 How did Print technology effect the folk literature?
Ans.
• In Punjab, too, a similar folk literature was widely printed from the early twentieth century.
• Ram Chaddha published the fast-selling Istri Dharm Vichar to teach women how to be obedient wives.
• The Khalsa Tract Society published cheap booklets with a similar message. Many of these were in the form of dialogues about the qualities of a good woman.
• In Bengal, an entire area in central Calcutta – the Battala – was devoted to the printing of popular books. Here you could buy cheap editions of religious tracts and scriptures, as well as literature that was considered obscene and scandalous.
• By the late nineteenth century, a lot of these books were being profusely illustrated with woodcuts and coloured lithographs. Pedlars took the Battala publications to homes,enabling women to read them in their leisure time.

Print and the Poor People 

Q13 What was the impact of the print on the poor people?
Ans.
• Very cheap small books were brought to markets in nineteenth-century Madras towns and sold at crossroads, allowing poor people travelling to markets to buy them.
• Public libraries were set up from the early twentieth century, expanding the access to books.
• These libraries were located mostly in cities and towns, and at times in prosperous villages. For rich local patrons, setting up a library was a way of acquiring prestige.

Late Nineteenth Century, Issues of Caste Discrimination

Q14.How did print discuss the issues of social reform?
Ans.
From the late nineteenth century, issues of caste discrimination began to be written about in many printed tracts and essays.
• Jyotiba Phule, the Maratha pioneer of ‘low caste’ protest movements, wrote about the injustices of the caste system in his Gulamgiri (1871).
• In the twentieth century, B.R. Ambedkar in Maharashtra and E.V. Ramaswamy Naicker in Madras, better known as Periyar, wrote powerfully on caste and their writings were
read by people all over India.
• Local protest movements and sects also created a lot of popular journals and tracts criticising ancient scriptures and envisioning a new and just future.

Workers in Factories

Q15.What was the impact of print on workers in the factories?
Ans.
Workers in factories were too overworked and lacked the education to write much about their experiences.
• Kashibaba, a Kanpur millworker, wrote and published Chhote Aur Bade Ka Sawal in 1938 to show the links between caste and class exploitation.
• The poems of another Kanpur millworker, who wrote under the name of Sudarshan Chakr between 1935 and 1955, were brought together and published in a collection called Sacchi Kavitayan.
• By the 1930s, Bangalore cotton millworkers set up libraries to educate themselves, following the example of Bombay workers.
• These were sponsored by social reformers who tried to restrict excessive drinking among them, to bring literacy and, sometimes, to propagate the message of nationalism.

Print and Censorship

• Before 1798, the colonial state under the East India Company was not too concerned with censorship. Strangely, its early measures to control printed matter were directed against Englishmen in India who were critical of Company misrule and hated the actions of particular Company officers.
• The Company was worried that such criticisms might be used by its critics in England to attack its trade monopoly in India.
• By the 1820s, the Calcutta Supreme Court passed certain regulations to control press freedom and the Company began encouraging publication of newspapers that would
celebrate British rule.
• In 1835, faced with urgent petitions by editors of English and vernacular newspapers,Governor-General Bentinck agreed to revise press laws. Thomas Macaulay, a liberal colonial official, formulated new rules that restored the earlier freedoms.

After the Revolt of 1857

Wht prompted the British government to curb thefreedom of the Indian press and what steps did it take to achieve this aim/
• After the revolt of 1857, the attitude to freedom of the press changed. Enraged Englishmen demanded a clamp down on the ‘native’ press. As vernacular newspapers became assertively nationalist, the colonial government began debating measures of stringent control.

STEPS TKEN BY THE BRITISH
• In 1878, the Vernacular Press Act was passed, modelled on the Irish Press Laws.
• It provided the government with extensive rights to censor reports and editorials in the vernacular press.
• From now on the government kept regular track of the vernacular newspapers published in different provinces. When a report was judged as seditious, the newspaper was warned,
and if the warning was ignored, the press was liable to be seized and the printing machinery confiscated.

Nationalist Newspapers
Explain how the print culture led to the the growth of Nationlism in India?
Despite repressive measures, nationalist newspapers grew in numbers in all parts of India.

• They reported on colonial misrule and encouraged nationalist activities.
• Attempts to throttle nationalist criticism provoked militant protest.
• This in turn led to a renewed cycle of persecution and protests.
• When Punjab revolutionaries were deported in 1907, Balgangadhar Tilak wrote with great sympathy about them in his Kesari. This led to his imprisonment in 1908, provoking in turn widespread protests all over India.

GLOSSARY

Ques-1. Define the following words.
Ans.-
a.) Calligraphy- The art of beautiful and stylized writing.
b.) Vellum- A parchment made from the skin of animals.
c.) Platen- In letterpress printing, platen is a board which is pressed onto the back of the paper to get the impression from the type. At one time it used to be a wooden board; later it is made of the steel.
d.) Compositor- The person who composes the text for printing.
e.) Galley- Metal frame in which types are laid and the text composed.
f.) Ballad- A historical account or folk tale in verse, usually sung or recited.
g.) Taverns- Places where people gathered to drink alcohol, to be served food, and to meet friends and exchange news.
h.) Protestant Reformations- A sixteenth- century movement to reform the Catholic Church dominated by Rome. Martin Luther was one of the main Protestant reformers. Several traditions of anti- Catholic Christianity developed out of the movement.
i.) Inquisition- A former Roman Catholic court for identifying and punishing heretics.
j.) Heretical- Beliefs which do not follow the accepted teachings of the Church. In medieval times, heresy was seen as a threat to the right of the Church to decide on what should be believed and what should not.Heretical beliefs were severely punished.
k.) Satiety- The state of being fulfilled much beyond the point of satisfaction.
l.) Seditious- Action, speech or writing that is seen as opposition the government.
m.) Denominations- Sub groups within a religion.
n.) Almanac- An annual publication giving astronomical data, information about the movements of the sun and moon, timing of full tides and eclipses, and much else that was of importance in the everyday life of people.
o.) Chapbook- A term used to describe pocket- size books that are sold by traveling pedlars called chapmen. These became popular from the time of the sixteenth- century print revolution.
p.) Despotism- A system of governance in which absolute power is exercised by an individual, unregulated by legal and constitutional checks.
q.) Ulama- Legal scholars of Islam and the sharia (a body of Islamic law).
r.) Fatwa- A legal pronouncement on Islamic law usually given by a mufti (legal scholar) to clarify issues on which the law is uncertain.

 

Please click the link below to download pdf file for CBSE Class 10 Social Science Print Culture And Modern World Notes.

Contemporary India II Chapter 02 Forest and Wildlife Resources
CBSE Class 10 Social Science Forests And Wildlife Resources Notes
India and Contemporary World II Chapter 01 The Rise of Nationalism in Europe
CBSE Class 10 Social Science The Rise Of Nationalism In Europe Notes

More Study Material

CBSE Class 10 Social Science India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World Notes

We hope you liked the above notes for topic India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World which has been designed as per the latest syllabus for Class 10 Social Science released by CBSE. Students of Class 10 should download and practice the above notes for Class 10 Social Science regularly. All revision notes have been designed for Social Science by referring to the most important topics which the students should learn to get better marks in examinations. Studiestoday is the best website for Class 10 students to download all latest study material.

Notes for Social Science CBSE Class 10 India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World

Our team of expert teachers have referred to the NCERT book for Class 10 Social Science to design the Social Science Class 10 notes. If you read the concepts and revision notes for one chapter daily, students will get higher marks in Class 10 exams this year. Daily revision of Social Science course notes and related study material will help you to have a better understanding of all concepts and also clear all your doubts. You can download all Revision notes for Class 10 Social Science also from www.studiestoday.com absolutely free of cost in Pdf format. After reading the notes which have been developed as per the latest books also refer to the NCERT solutions for Class 10 Social Science provided by our teachers

India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World Notes for Social Science CBSE Class 10

All revision class notes given above for Class 10 Social Science have been developed as per the latest curriculum and books issued for the current academic year. The students of Class 10 can rest assured that the best teachers have designed the notes of Social Science so that you are able to revise the entire syllabus if you download and read them carefully. We have also provided a lot of MCQ questions for Class 10 Social Science in the notes so that you can learn the concepts and also solve questions relating to the topics. All study material for Class 10 Social Science students have been given on studiestoday.

India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World CBSE Class 10 Social Science Notes

Regular notes reading helps to build a more comprehensive understanding of India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World concepts. notes play a crucial role in understanding India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World in CBSE Class 10. Students can download all the notes, worksheets, assignments, and practice papers of the same chapter in Class 10 Social Science in Pdf format. You can print them or read them online on your computer or mobile.

Notes for CBSE Social Science Class 10 India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World

CBSE Class 10 Social Science latest books have been used for writing the above notes. If you have exams then you should revise all concepts relating to India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World by taking out a print and keeping them with you. We have also provided a lot of Worksheets for Class 10 Social Science which you can use to further make yourself stronger in Social Science

Where can I download latest CBSE Class 10 Social Science India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World notes

You can download notes for Class 10 Social Science India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World for latest academic session from StudiesToday.com

Can I download the Notes for India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World Class 10 Social Science in Pdf format

Yes, you can click on the link above and download notes PDFs for Class 10 Social Science India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World which you can use for daily revision

Are the revision notes available for India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World Class 10 Social Science for the latest CBSE academic session

Yes, the notes issued for Class 10 Social Science India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World have been made available here for latest CBSE session

How can I download the India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World Class 10 Social Science Notes pdf

You can easily access the link above and download the Class 10 Notes for Social Science India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World for each topic in Pdf

Is there any charge for the Class 10 Social Science India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World notes

There is no charge for the notes for CBSE Class 10 Social Science India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World, you can download everything free of charge

Which is the best online platform to find notes for India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World Class 10 Social Science

www.studiestoday.com is the best website from which you can download latest notes for India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World Social Science Class 10

Where can I find topic-wise notes for Class 10 Social Science India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World

Come to StudiesToday.com to get best quality topic wise notes for Class 10 Social Science India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World

Can I get latest India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World Class 10 Social Science revision notes as per CBSE syllabus

We have provided all notes for each topic of Class 10 Social Science India and Contemporary World II Chapter 5 Print Culture and the Modern World as per latest CBSE syllabus