The Business of the Printing Press in the Time of Gutenberg

Seth Fischer bio ↓  ·  September 3rd, 2010  ·  filed under books

“Inventing the printing press was not the same thing as inventing the publishing business. Technologically, craftsmen were ready to follow Gutenberg’s example, opening presses across Europe. But they could only guess at what to print, and the public saw no particular need to buy books. The books they knew, manuscript texts, were valuable items and were copied to order. The habit of spending money to read something a printer had decided to publish was an alien one.”

— At The Boston Globe, an interview with Andrew Pettegree on how it took people a very long time to figure out the business of publishing after the invention of the printing press.

He also tells the story of how Gutenberg himself was thrown out of the printing press business by his partner because he kept losing money printing Bibles.

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Seth Fischer's writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Swink, PankGuernica, Monkeybicycle, Gertrude, and elsewhere. He's Sunday Editor at The Rumpus and founding editor of The Splinter Generation and webscribbler.net. He also does writing consultation. Reach him at seth.fischer (at) gmail.com or @sethfischer. More from this author →

One Response to “The Business of the Printing Press in the Time of Gutenberg”

  1. Katherine C Says:

    This is a really interesting point that I hadn’t thought of before. The printing press enabled the printing of the Bible, but the common people were not necessarily going to buy books just because the printer thought it would be a good book. This makes me wonder how the publishing business was able to develop, since many publishers would have to almost take a chance on the authors and books they print?

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