Thursday, July 12, 2007

Creativity's Modest Origins



We live in an era when "creatives" are segregated from ordinary people, thought of as either crazy, gifted, or valuable but also a pain in the ass.



Before, I go where I want to go with this thought, I must eat, or at least discuss eating, Japanese style. These are quail eggs: Yum!



This is Oshinko, pickled cucumber: Yum!



This my little rose growing out front.



This is the sweet basil I've been raising; it's getting to the harvesting stage.

***

Now, to the main point:

LONDON (AFP) — Underwear underpins the spread of Western culture, with discarded underpants ranking alongside the invention of printing in the spread of literacy, according to a medieval historian.

Delegates at the International Medieval Congress at the University of Leeds, northern England, were told that social migration from rural to urban areas in the 13th century brought with it changes in attire.

Whereas rough and ready peasants thought little of wearing nothing under their smocks, the practice became frowned upon in the burgeoning towns and cities, leading to a run on undergarments.

And when the underwear was worn out, it provided a steady supply of material used by papermakers to make books.

"The development of literacy was certainly helped by the introduction of paper, which was made from rags," Marco Mostert, of Utrecht University in the Netherlands and one of the conference organizers, said this week.

"These rags came from discarded clothes, which cost much less than the very expensive parchment which was previously used for books.

"In the 13th century, so it is thought, as more people moved into urban centres, the use of underwear increased -- which caused an increase in the number of rags available for paper-making."

The invention of the movable type printing press by Johannes Gutenberg in the mid-15th century is generally credited with spreading learning.

But Mostert said that although literacy did not become widespread until the 19th century, it was more common in the Middle Ages than many believe because of cheap paper made from rags.

© 2007 AFP
Copyright © 2003-2007 Agence France Presse. All rights reserved.

-30-

No comments: