[Focal Point “Reading Animal”. Hermann Cohn and the Emergence of the Fin de Siècle Hygiene of Reading]

Ber Wiss. 2015 Dec;38(4):305-20. doi: 10.1002/bewi.201501731.
[Article in German]

Abstract

From the 1860s onward, ‘eye experts’ increasingly fretted the alleged surge of myopia attributed to an increase of reading matter circulating in schools. In order to avert the inauspicious prospects, revised school desks designed to prevent children from becoming myopic were introduced. During the 1880s, said experts turned to printed matter, maintaining that books must become more reader friendly. Along with the turn to books, a peculiar shift within the hygiene discourse occurred: While the ill addressed by school desk-revisions was myopia, the goal of revising book design was to make reading less tiring. This paper explores both the shift from the hygiene of the eye to the hygiene of reading as well as the materialization of the stipulations and claims made by reading hygienists. In doing so, the paper demonstrates that optimizing the reading process was closely linked to a fear of overburdening and fatigue which expressed itself in the psychopathological discourse of the time.

Keywords: Augenhygiene; Fin de Siècle; Kurzsichtigkeit; Lesehygiene; Ophthalmologie; Schulbank; Typographie; fin de siècle; hygiene of the eye; myopia; ophthalmology; overburdening; reading hygiene; school desk; typography; Überbürdung.

Publication types

  • Historical Article

MeSH terms

  • Asthenopia / complications
  • Asthenopia / history*
  • Asthenopia / prevention & control
  • Books / history*
  • Child
  • Eye*
  • History, 19th Century
  • Humans
  • Hygiene*
  • Myopia / etiology
  • Myopia / history*
  • Myopia / prevention & control
  • Reading*
  • Refraction, Ocular*
  • Schools / history