Worlds of Reference is a history of dictionaries, encyclopedias and
reference materials, but it is also far more than that, because it is
concerned with the growth of civilisation, education and culture - and
particularly how the human race learned to store information beyond the
brain. It looks at how our species moved from being able to communicate
only orally and to store information only in the head (rote
memorisation) to the evolution of technologies for external reference:
clay- and cunieform, reed-and-hieroglyph, bamboo-and-ideogram,
parchment-and-alphabet, codices, books, pages, columns and so forth
through the print revolution to the current electronic revolution. Along
the way it looks at how this has affected languages like Latin, french,
and English and people's attitudes to those languages - and to words and
the listing of information about words. This intensely human subject is
as compelling and important today as any account of kings, queens, wars
and social upheaval.