Artigo Revisado por pares

Death by Gramophone

2003; Indiana University Press; Volume: 27; Issue: 1-2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2979/jml.2003.27.1-2.1

ISSN

1529-1464

Autores

Sebastian D.G. Knowles,

Tópico(s)

Cybernetics and Technology in Society

Resumo

o, n August 12, 1877, or thereabouts, Thomas Edison shouted Mary had a little lamb at a cylinder wrapped in tin foil, cranked the machine up again, and heard a reproduction of his voice.2 There are others who can claim to have invented the gramophone ? Charles Cros had already shown how it was to be dtme before the French Academy four months earlier, and Scott de Martinville did much the same thing as Edison before Queen Victoria in 1857 ? but Edison was the first to take out a patent. Speech has become, as it were, immortal, said Edison, who immediately foresaw many possibilities for his machine, some of which are still currently in use: the taking of dictation, the recording of books for the blind, the teaching of foreign languages, the reproduction of the last words of dying persons, and, most far-sightedly, the potential for connecting his new device to the telephone, to make the telephone an auxiliary in the transmission of permanent and in valuable records.3 Edison recorded on vertical cylinders and called his machine the phonograph; his main rival in the early days of the recording industry, Emile Berliner, used horizontal disks and called his invention the gramophone. Berliner had hopes similar to Edison's, foreseeing a time when future generations will be able to condense within the space of twenty minutes a tone picture of a single lifetime: five minutes of a child's prattle, five ofthe boy's exultations, five ofthe man's reflections, and five from the feeble utterances of the death-bed.4 It is immediately interesting to see that, from its infancy, the gramophone is associated by both of its progenitors with the utterances of the death-bed, and the recording of the dying. The

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