CBSE Class 10 History Chapter-7 Print Culture and Modern World – Free PDF Download
Free PDF download of Important Questions with Answers for CBSE Class 10 History Chapter 7 -Print Culture and Modern World prepared by expert History teachers from latest edition of CBSE(NCERT) books only by CoolGyan to score more marks in CBSE board examination.
CBSE Class 10 History Chapter-7 Print Culture and Modern World Important Questions
CBSE Class 10 History Important Questions Chapter 7 – Print Culture and Modern World
3 Mark Questions
1. “Print popularized the ideas of the idea of the enlightenment thinkers.” Explain.
Ans. 1. Collectively the writings of thinkers provided a critical commentary on tradition, superstitionand despotism.
2. Scholars and thinkers argued for the rule of reason rather than custom and demanded thateverything to be judged through the application of reason and rationality.
3. They attacked the sacred authority of the church and the despotic power of the state thus eroding the legitimacy of a social order based on tradition.
4. The writing of Voltaire and Rousseau were read widely and those who read these books sawthe world through new eyes, eyes that were questioning critical and rational.
2. How did a new reading public emerges with the printing revolution?
Ans. 1. Earlier reading was restricted to elites but now Access to books created a new culture of reading.
2. Earlier books were very expensive and it was very difficult to reproduce the books in sufficient numbers.
3. Due to printing revolution books could reach to the wider section of people.
4. Earlier there was a hearing public but now a reading public emerged.
3. What was the reaction of religious authorities and monarchs about printing?
Ans. 1. Not everyone welcomed the printed books and those who did also had fears about it.
2. It was feared that if there was no control over what was printed and read then irreligious thoughts might spread.
3. The authority and value of the valuable literature would be destroyed.
4. What were the views of Mercier?
Ans. 1. According to Mercier, ‘the printing press is the most powerful engine of progress and public opinion is the force that will sweep despotism away.”
2. In many of Mercier‘s novels, the heroes are transformed by the acts of reading.
3. Mercier believed that power of print will bring down despotism.
5. Explain the role of visual art and images in printing in India.
Ans. 1. With the increasing number of printing presses, visual images could be easily reproduced in multiple copies.
2. Painters like Raja Ravi Verma produced images for mass circulation.
3. Cheap prints and calendars were bought even by poor to decorate the walls of their houses.
6. Why was Menocchio hauled and executed?
Ans. 1. Menocchio a miller in Italy began to read books that were available in his locality.
2. He reinterpreted the message of bible and formulated a view of god and creation that enraged the Roman Catholic Church.
3. When the Roman Church began its inquisition and repress heretical ideas, Manocchio was hauled up twice and ultimately executed.
7. How print was used by the Imperial court of China?
Ans. 1. The imperial state in china was, for a very long time the major producer of printing material.
2. China possessed a huge bureaucratic system which recruited its personnel through civil services examinations.
3. Textbooks for this examination were printed in vast numbers under the sponsorship of the imperial state.
8. How print was diversified by the seventeenth century in China?
Ans. 1. By the seventeenth century as urban culture bloomed in China, the use of print diversified. Print was no longer used just by scholar-officials.
2. Merchants used print in their everyday life, as they collected trade information.
3. Reading increasingly became a leisure activity.
4. The new readership preferred fictional narratives, poetry, autobiographies, anthologies of literary masterpieces and romantic plays.
9. Explain the contribution of Kitagawa Utamaroto to art?
Ans. 1. Kitagawa Utamaro born in Edo in 1753 was widely known for his contributions to an art form called Ukiyo or depiction of ordinary human experiences, especially urban ones.
2. These prints travelled to contemporary US and Europe and influenced artists like Manet, Monet and van Gogh.
3. Publishers like Tsutaya Juzaburo identified subjects and commissioned artists who drew the theme n outline.
10. How was print come to Europe?
Ans. 1. In the eleventh century Chinese paper reached Europe via silk route.
2. Paper made possible the production of manuscripts carefully written by scribes.
3. Then in 1295 Marco Polo a great explorer returned to Italy after many years of exploration in China.
4. China already had the technology of woodblock printing. Marco Polo brought this knowledge back with him
11. Explain the features of Indian Manuscripts before the age of age of print.
Ans. 1. India had a very rich and old tradition of hand written manuscripts in Sanskrit, Arabic, Persian, as well as in various vernacular languages.
2. Manuscripts were copied on palm leaves or on hand made paper.
3. Pages were some time beautifully illustrated.
4. They would be either pressed between wooden covers or sewn together to ensure preservation.
12. Explain the drawbacks of Indian manuscripts?
Ans. 1. Manuscripts were highly expensive and fragile.
2. They had to be handled carefully.
3. They could not be read easily as the script was written in different styles.
4. So manuscripts were not widely used in everyday life.
13. Write any three innovations related to printing press?
Ans. 1. By the mid-nineteenth century, Richard M Hoe of New York had perfected the power driven cylindrical press. This was capable of printing 8000 sheets per hour.
2. In the late nineteenth century, the offset press was developed which could print up to six colours at a time.
3. From the turn of twentieth century, electrically operated presses accelerated printing operations.
14. What strategies were adopted by printers and publishers to sell their products in Europe?
Ans. 1. In nineteenth century periodical serialized important novels which gave birth to a particular way of writing novels.
2. In the 1920s in England popular works were sold in cheap series, called the Shilling Series.
3. The dust cover or the book jacket is also a twentieth century innovation.
15. Why was Hickey persecuted by General Warren Hastings?
Ans. 1. From 1780 James Augustus Hickey began to edit the Bengal Gazette, a weekly magazine that described itself as a commercial paper open to all but influence by none.
2. So it was private English enterprise, proud of its independence from colonial influence that began English printing in India.
3. Hickey published a lot of advertisements, including those that related to the import and sale of slaves.
4. But he also published a lot of gossips of company’s senior officials in India. Enraged by this Hickey persecuted by General Warren Hastings.
16. How were lives and feelings of women written and printed in various books?
Ans. 1. Lives and feelings of women began to be written in particularly vivid and intense way.
2. Liberal husbands and fathers began educating their women at home and sent them to schools when women’s schools were setup in the cities and towns after the mid 19th century.
3. Many journals began carrying writing by women and explained why women should be educated.
17. How were workers influenced by the print revolution?
Ans. 1. Lending libraries had been in existence from the seventeenth century onwards. In the nineteenth century lending libraries in England began instruments for educating white-collar workers, artisans and lower middle class people.
2. Some time self educating working class people wrote for themselves.
3. After the working day was gradually shortened from the mid nineteenth century, workers had some time for self-improvement and self expression. They wrote political tracts and autobiographies in large numbers.
18. How did the print popularized the ideas of the enlightened thinkers?
Ans. 1. The writings of enlightened thinkers provided a critical commentary on traditions, superstitions and despotism.
2. They argued for the rule of reason rather than custom, and demanded that everything be judged through the application of reason and rationality.
3. They attacked the scared authority of the church and the despotic power of the state.
19. Describe the contribution of scientists and philosophers in the development of popular literature.
Ans. 1. Historians have argued that writings of famous philosophers created the conditions within which French Revolution occurred.
2. The Scientists like Isaac Newton began to publish their discoveries they could influence a much wider circle of readers with the scientific bent of mind.
3. Ancient and medieval scientific texts were complied and published and maps and scientific diagrams were widely printed.
4. The ideas of scientists and philosophers now became more accessible to the common people.
20. Which factor led to reading mania in the 17th and 18th centuries in Europe?
Ans. 1. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries literacy rate went up in most parts of Europe.
2. New forms of popular literature appeared in print, targeting new audiences. Book sellers employed peddlers who roamed around villages, carrying little books for sale.
3. Cheap books were available in the market and the production of books was very high.
4. Newspapers and journals carried information about wars and trade as well as news of developments in other places.
21. Highlight the common conviction of people in the mid 18th century about the print culture.
Ans. 1. Many people believed that books could change the world, liberate society from despotism and tyranny and a herald a time when reason and intellect would rule.
2. Louise-Sebastien Mercier a novelist in France declared, “The printing press most powerful engine of progresses and public opinion is the force that will sweep despotism away.”
3. By the mid 18th century, there was a common conviction that books were a means of spreading progress and enlightenment.
22. Write about the uses of manuscripts in India?
Ans. 1. These written manuscripts provide information on the existence of different civilizations.
2. Manuscripts emphasizes on the importance of the survival of different civilizations.
3. The manuscripts are considered precocious as a source of history in the recent tomes.
23. Why did James Augustus Hickey claim that the “Bengal Gazette was a commercial paper open to all but influence by none”? Explain
Ans. 1. From 1780 James Augustus Hickey began to edit the Bengal Gazette, a weekly magazine that described itself as a commercial paper open to all but influence by none.
2. So it was private English enterprise, proud of its independence from colonial influence that began English printing in India.
3. Hickey published a lot of advertisements, including those that related to the import and sale of slaves.
4. But he also published a lot of gossips of company’s senior officials in India. Enraged by this Hickey was persecuted by General Warren Hastings.
24. Examine the role of missionaries in the growth of press in India.
Ans. 1. The printing press first came to Goa with the Portuguese missionaries in the mid-16th century.
2. Catholic priests printed the first Tamil Book on Indian religion in 1579 at Cochin.
3. By 1710, Dutch protestant missionaries had printed 32 Tamil Texts many of them were translations of older works.
25. Explain any two steps taken by ‘Ulamas’ to defend their religion.
Ans. 1. Ulamas feared that colonial rulers would encourage conversion of religion to Christianity.
2. To counter this they used cheap lithographic presses, published Persian and Urdu translations of Holy Scripture and printed religious newspapers and tracts.
3. The Deoband Seminary published Fatwas telling Muslim readers how to conduct themselves in their everyday lives, and explaining the meaning of Islamic doctrine.
26. How did the religious communities in India make use of printing technology to spread their ideas? Explain.
Ans. 1. Ulamas of Muslim community used cheap lithographic presses, published Persian and Urdu translations of Holy Scripture and printed religious newspapers and tracts.
2. The Deoband Seminary published Fatwas telling Muslim readers how to conduct themselves in their everyday lives, and explaining the meaning of Islamic doctrine
3. Hindu published religious texts like Ramcharitmanas in vernacular language from Calcutta.
4. In Bengal ‘Samachar Chandrika’ was published by Hindu Orthodoxy.
27. Describe the issues related to caste as taken by the different reformers of India.
Ans. 1. Jyotiba Phule the Maratha pioneer of low caste protest movements wrote about the injustices of the caste system in his Gulamgiri.
2. In the twentieth century B.R. Ambedkar, E.V. Ramaswamy and Mahatma Gandhi wrote on caste discrimination and their writings were read by people of all over India.
3. Kashibaba a Kanpur mill worker wrote ‘Chhote or bade ka Sawal’ in 1938 to depict the relation between caste and class exploitation.
28. How did the Vernacular Press Act affected the vernacular newspapers?
Ans. 1. The Vernacular Press Act of 1878 was passed which empowered the government to censor reports and editorials.
2. Government kept a regular tract of vernacular newspapers. If a report was judged seditious, the newspaper was warned and if warning was ignored, strict actions were taken by the government.
3. In the case of violation of the act was repeated, the press was seized and the machines were confiscated.
29. Give three examples of women of conservative families who began to reading, writing in secrecy.
Ans. 1. Rashsundri Debi a young married girl of a very orthodox family learnt to read in secrecy of her kitchen and wrote her autobiography- ‘Amar Jiban’ in 1876.
2. Tarabai Shinde and Pandita Ramabai from Maharashtra wrote books and highlighted the miserable lives of widow in upper caste Hindu families.
3. Kailaishbashini Debi wrote books about painful experiences how women had to go through in their families and imprisoned at home.
30. Explain any three reasons due to which children become large readers in the 19th century Europe?
Ans. 1. In Europe primary educations became compulsory.
2. Children became an important category of readers.
3. Grimm Brothers of Germany compiled folk tales from peasants and published a collection in 1812.
4. Production of school textbooks became critical for the publishing industry.
5. A children press was set up in France.
31. Explain any three reasons due to which women become large readers in the 19th century Europe?
Ans. 1. Especially penny magazines were published to attract the women readers.
2. Penny magazines were manuals teaching proper behaviors and housekeeping.
3. Literacy rate was increased among the women.
4. Some of the best known novelists were women.
32. How print revolution led to the development of reading mania in Europe.
Ans. As literacy and schools spread in European countries there was a virtual reading mania.
1. A new forms of popular literature appeared to target new readers
2. There were ritual calendars along with ballads and folk tales.
3. In England penny chapbooks were carried by petty peddlers known as chap men and sold fora penny, So that even poor could buy them.
4. In France these law priced books were called Bibliotheque Bleue as they were bound in cheap blue covers.
5. There were romances, histories, books of various sixes, serving developed to combine information on current affairs with entertainment.
6. Periodical pressed developed to combine information on current affairs with entertainment.
7. The idea of scientists and scholars had now become more accessible to the common people.
33. How did oral culture enter print and how was the printed material transmitted orally? Explain?
Ans. Oral culture entered print into the following ways –
1. Printers published popular ballads and folktales.
2. Books were profusely illustrated with pictures. Printed material was transmitted orally in the following ways:-
I.These were sung at gathering in villages, taverns and in towns.
II. They were recited in public gathering.
34. Explain the impact of print on Indian women.
Ans. 1. Writers started writing about the lives and features of women and this increased the number of women readers.
2. Women writers write their own autobiography. They highlighted the condition of women,their ignorance and how they forced to do hard domestic labour.
3. A large section of Hindu writing was devoted to the education of women.
4. In the early 20th century the journals written by women become very popular in which women’s education, widowhood, widow remarriage were discussed.
5. Many writers published how to teach women to be obedient wives.
35. By the end of the 19th century a new visual cultural was taking shapes. Write any three features of this new visual cultural.
Ans. 1. Visual images could be easily reproduced in multiple copies.
2. Printers produced images for mass circulation cheap prints and calendars could be brought even by the poor.
3. By the 1870’s caricatures and cartoons were being published in journals and news papers.
4. Mass production of cost and visual images reduced the cost of production. So cheap prints and calendars were available in the market even for the poor to decorate the walls of their homes.
36. ‘Many Histories have argued that print culture created the conditions within which the French Revolution occurred.’ Explain.
Ans. 1. The print popularized the ideas of the enlightened thinkers who attacked the authority of the church and the despotic power of the state.
2. The print created a new culture of dialogue and debate and the public become aware of reasoning. They recognized the need to question the existing ideas and beliefs.
3. The literature of 1780’s mocked the royalty and criticized their morality and the existing social order. This literature led to the growth of hostile sentiments against.