School of Information Sciences

The long view of systems of information

Investigator

  • Alistair Black

In response to the perceived (by some) onset of an information society, historians have begun to study its roots and antecedents. The past is replete with the rise, fall, and transformation of systems of information, which are not to be confused with the narrower computer-mediated world of information systems. The history of systems of information—which for digestibility can be labeled information history—lacks neither scale nor scope. Systems of information have played a critical role in the transition to, and subsequent development of, capitalism; the growth of the state, especially the modern, nation-state; the rise of modernity, science, and the public sphere; imperialism; and geo-politics. In the context of these epochal shifts and episodes in human thinking and social organization, this project presents a critical bibliographic survey of histories—outside the well-trodden paths of library and information science history—that have foregrounded, or made reference to, a wide variety of systems of information.     

Funding Agencies

Research Areas:

School of Information Sciences

501 E. Daniel St.

MC-493

Champaign, IL

61820-6211

Voice: (217) 333-3280

Fax: (217) 244-3302

Email: ischool@illinois.edu

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