A Brief History of Media
A Brief History of Media
A Brief History of Media
Humans are social beings who want and need to communicate with each other.
According to the pioneering research of Dr. Kathryn Barnand founder of the Center for
Infant Mental Health and Development at the University of Washington, even infants try
to communicate with their caregivers using non-verbal cues. Like babies, early humans
only needed to communicate with people within a small circle so sounds and gestures
were enough. Humans eventually learned to speak, although scientists have not yet
agreed on a theory on how exactly this happened.
Humans started writing at around 3,200 BCE (Before Common Era) in Mesopotamia and
600 BCE in Mesoamerica. It arose from the need to indicate quantity or numbers for
recordkeeping. Words for "finger are found in several ancient languages for numbers
which suggest that humans first counted and communicated quantity with their fingers.
This then evolved into cutting notches on tree barks or stones to represent numbers. To
record other things and concepts, early humans began drawing on caves and animal
skin. The earliest form of writing like the Egyptian hieroglyphs are simplified drawings.
Pictographic writing systems, like those used by the Chinese, still exist today.
As human settlements got bigger and bigger, the need to communicate to a greater
number of people grew. Horns, drums, fire, and smoke signals were used to send a
message quickly and over a vast distance (e.g. "Invaders!"). Messengers were also
used to physically disseminate information more precisely. Archaeological accounts
corroborate Biblical passages about the Persians using messengers on horses to reach
more people over great distances faster. This ancient "pony express" may be the
predecessor of the postal service, but like so many ancient forms of spreading to a
large group of people, it required resources that were practically exclusive to the ruling
class.
During the pre-industrial age, information was mostly passed on orally. Important
documents like laws and edicts had to be tediously copied by hand and posted in public
places, or town criers travel from place to place to read them out loud. The process was
difficult, slow, and unreliable. Information also flowed in only one direction, from the
ruler who issued the edict to his subjects. The whole process must be repeated in
reverse if and when the receiver decides to respond. But when the source of
information is an authority, as is usually the case, the strict hierarchy in society
discourages--even forbids-any response from the recipients.
It wasn't until the 17th century, hundreds of years after the invention of printing
technology lowered the cost of books and reading materials, that the modern
newspaper was invented in Europe. Before that, printed news sheets appeared in the
Ming Dynasty Court in Beijing in 1582 and block-printed handbills commemorating
events were sold in 17th century Japanese cities. Modern magazines were invented in
the 18th century. It took an awfully long time for all these developments in
communication to happen.