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Burning the Books: A history of knowledge under attack by Richard Ovenden

by
October 2020, no. 425

Burning the Books: A history of knowledge under attack by Richard Ovenden

John Murray, $32.99 pb, 308 pp

Burning the Books: A history of knowledge under attack by Richard Ovenden

by
October 2020, no. 425

The store of knowledge available to humanity has never been so immense and accessible as it is today. Nor has it been so vulnerable to neglect or erasure. That, in essence, is the message of this book, written with urgency by the most senior executive at the Bodleian Libraries at Oxford, one of the largest and oldest library systems in the world.

In Burning the Books: A history of knowledge under attack, Richard Ovenden explains that while competing impulses to preserve and destroy knowledge are nothing new in human history, the invention of the internet has brought with it the potential for loss of knowledge on a scale never before seen. In the historical equivalent of the blink of an eye, we have come to depend on the internet despite the basic instability of information technology. This is a fine thing – except when it suddenly fails.

Simon Caterson reviews 'Burning the Books: A history of knowledge under attack' by Richard Ovenden

Burning the Books: A history of knowledge under attack

by Richard Ovenden

John Murray, $32.99 pb, 308 pp

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Comment (1)

  • It is interesting that the Australian government is spending million of dollars on the Australian War Memorial but cutting financial supports to libraries, education and the arts. The policy will have devastating effects on our future.
    Posted by Iradj Nabavi-Tabrizi
    28 October 2020