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In most countries
on the continent
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There were princes,
they were absolute regimes,
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The degree of absolutism was
relative to a particular setting,
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But If you take France as the most important
central, most populace country,
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you had a very elaborate system of
censorship, but in addition to that,
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you had a monopoly of production
in the bookseller's guild in Paris,
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it had police powers
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and then the police itself had
specialised inspectors of the book trade
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so you put all of that together
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and the state was very powerful
in its attempt to control the printed word.
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By the time you time you get
to the age of the Enlightenment
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there's a highly organised
administration of the book trade,
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so in principle anything that appears in print
has to pass the censorship
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and be registered,
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to go through an elaborate process,
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and of course this didn't work
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that the directions set,
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the organisation set up
by the state was so elaborate,
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so baroque in its bureaucracy
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that in a sense it was
counterproductive.
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Censorship, you know,
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varies from regime to regime.
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We think we know
what censorship is,
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but i would argue that it's a
different thing under different systems,
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so the basic idea of censorship
in 18th century france
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is the concept of privilege
or private law,
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a publisher gets the right to publish
a particular text
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that is denied to others,
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so he has that privilege.
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that's different from censorship
under stalin, say, or hitler
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There is a monopoly of what's called
the booksellers guild of paris.
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it has police power;
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its syndics and aguane are
obliged to inspect
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all of the printing houses in paris
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and printers are officially limited
to 36 printing shops.
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And so the guild is supposed to go
around from shop to shop
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and find out what
they're printing,
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make sure there are no illegal
books being printed.
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No books that
contravene privileges
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the equivalent of copyright in a sense etc.
So yes they have powers
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and they also inspect every single book
which is shipped into paris.
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the books are stopped at the wall
which surrounds paris
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and any ship which is
marked 'libri' books
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is sent to a special
large hall
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where the booksellers guild and inspector
of police will inspect it.
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Essentially what you have
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is a centralised administration for
controlling the book trade
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using censorship and
also using the monopoly
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of the established publishers
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against that you've got
publishing houses,
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print presses that
surround france
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in what i call a
'fertile crescent'
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dozens and dozens of them producing
books which are smuggled
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across the french borders
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and distributed everywhere in the kingdom
by an underground system,
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so in effect you've got two systems
at war with one another.
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And it's the system of production
outside france
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that is crucial for the
enlightenment,
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virtually all of the works that we associate
with the french enlightenment
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are published in Amsterdam,
in the Hague,
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in Brussels in Geneva,
in Neuchatel, in Basel
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these are the places where
Rosseau, Voltaire
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and company get
themselves printed,
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but these printers also
produce other things
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because they're in it not simply
to spread enlightenment,
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many of them are sympathetic
to the enlightenment
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they're in it to make money. So
they will satisfy demand,
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whatever the demand might be...
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the pirates had agents in paris
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and everywhere else, who were sending
them sheets of new books
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which they think will sell well,
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the pirates are systematically
doing market research
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in hundreds and thousands of letters,
they are sounding the market,
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they want to know
what demand is
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the reaction of publishers at the centre
is of course extremely hostile,
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I've read a lot of their letters;
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they're full of expressions
like buccaneer
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and private and people without
shame or morality etc.
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in actual fact many of these pirates
were good bourgeois,
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in Lausanne or, Geneva
or, Amsterdam
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and they thought, that they were
just 'doing business'.
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after all there was no
international copyright law
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and they were satisfying demand.
If the demand hapend to be in france
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well, that's a problem
for the french,
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but not for the
dutch or the swiss
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I must admit,
I always hesitate
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to pronounce on
world historical trends.
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But i've spend a lot
of time in the archives
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and you can at least
glimpse something,
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that might look world
historical from time to time,
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as you go through
various bits of old paper.
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What is clear is that
during the 18th century
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that the printed word as a
force is expanding everywhere
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and we can go into a
lots of detailed studies
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to find out why an
how that this happened
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The population is increasing, the
educational institutions are spreading,
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literacy is going up and there is this
new thing we call 'public opinion'.
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The phrase itself is first used in
the middle of the 18th century,
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I think the phenomenon
existed earlier,
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but for the last half
of the 18th century
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there is a public that is
fascinated with public affairs,
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now the mechanism
for controlling the media
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if you want to use that expression
notably the print media
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is simply not adequate to
controlling this demand.
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So everywhere around france,
even within france,
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there are entrepreneurs who take it
upon themselves to satisfy this demand
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and this can be in the form of clandestine manuscript newsletters,
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it can be in a form of fully printed
books and there are many other forms
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the one that I find most
interesting is songs.
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It turns out that everyone in the
18th century, if you take paris,
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had a repertory of tunes in his
or her had, as we do today.
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most of my tunes come
from commercials actually
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People would improvise
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new words to old tunes,
everyday.
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And these would be sung
in the streets of paris,
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sometimes by professionals,
who had hurdy-gurdys
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and would simply belt out the last
verse tune that everyone knew.
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And it could be about
the kings mistress,
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it could be about a minister
who is abusing power,
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it could be on a whole variety
of quite political subjects.
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This new verse is then picked up
because it is a great mnemonic device
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and the song is been song throughout
the streets of paris.
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I imagine the street of paris - it is just
echoing everywhere with songs.
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So that is a good example of how
in the absence of news media
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of proper newspaper, a new
kind of medium developed,
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that actually does
the job of newspapers
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I've studied hundreds of these songs and I would say, they were sung newspapers.
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There's no way that an
absolutist political system
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can totally suppress the
spread of information
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new media adapt themselves
to these circumstances,
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and often they can become even more
effective because of the repression.
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It's a fascinating process
and it culminates frankly
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right on the eve of the france
revolution, so that i would argue,
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Not only did this new media system
spread the enlightenment
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but, I won't use the word
'prepared', the way for the revolution
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it indicted the old regim
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that this power, public opinion,
became crucial
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in the collapse of
the government 1787-1788.