The paper analogue of the blog is not the diary, but rather
the commonplace book. With the availability of relatively cheap paper beginning as early as the 14th century, people began to collect knowledge in commonplace books. Bits of quotes, reference materials, summaries of arguments, all contained in a handy bound volume.
This merchant's commonplace, for example, dates from 1312 and contains hand-drawn diagrams of Venetian ships and descriptions of Venice's merchant culture.
An English commonplace dating to the 15th century, the
Book of Brome,
contains poems, notations on memorial law, lists of expenses, and diary entries.
John Locke devised a method for
keeping a
commonplace.
Thomas Jefferson kept both
legal and literary commonplaces, and owned a copy of
Sir John Randolph's legal commonplace, published in 1680.
posted by monju_bosatsu
on Nov 18, 2005 -
23 comments