Published: June 1, 2009

By William Kuskin, associate professor of English

鈥淪ymbolic Caxton鈥 is the first study to explore the introduction of printing in symbolic terms. It presents a powerful literary history in which the 15th听century is crucial to the overall story of English literature.

William Kuskin argues that the development of print production is part of a larger social network involving the political, economic, and literary systems that produce the intangible constellations of identity and authority. For Kuskin, William Caxton (1422鈥1491), the first English printer, becomes a unique lens through which to view these issues.

Kuskin contends that recognizing the fundamental complexity inherent in the transformation from manuscript to print鈥攖he power of literature to formulate its audience, the intimacy of capital and communication, the closeness of commodities and identity鈥攎akes possible a clear understanding of the way cultural, bibliographical, financial, and technological instruments intersect in a process of symbolic production.

While this book is the first to connect the contents of late medieval literature to its technological form, it also speaks to contemporary culture, wrestling with our own paradigm shift in the relationship between literature and technology.

Kuskin is the editor of 鈥淐axton鈥檚 Trace: Studies in the History of English Printing,鈥 also published by the University of Notre Dame Press.