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100 _a Damle, Madhura
_951376
245 _aSacred book, profane print: Print-as-commodity and patronage in colonial western India
260 _aModern Asian Studies
300 _a58(3), May, 2024: p.764-785
520 _aThe first printing press landed on the western coast of India in the mid-sixteenth century. The introduction of printing technology did not immediately lead to a flourishing print culture, and the oral and scribal traditions continued to thrive for at least three more centuries. This article examines the emergence of print culture in nineteenth-century western India by surveying the literary sources in the Marathi language. It argues that the book was regarded as a sacred object in the pre-print era and reading was considered a ritualistic activity. Print, on the other hand, was seen as defiling and therefore orthodox Brahmins hesitated to embrace the technology of printing. They were also threatened by the democratizing potential of printing. As the print culture bourgeoned, the sacredness of the book declined and it turned into a profane commodity. A market for vernacular books and periodicals started emerging gradually. However, pre-modern notions of literary patronage did not wither away as authors and publishers continued to bank on state patronage.- Reproduced https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/modern-asian-studies/article/sacred-book-profane-print-printascommodity-and-patronage-in-colonial-western-india/AB6628A1AB1629B56930CDD3D9323199
650 _aPrint culture, Print-capitalism, Patronage, Colonial India, Marathi.
_951377
773 _aModern Asian Studies
942 _cAR