From Orality to Textuality in English Accounting and its Books, 1553-1680 Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • A survey of English accounting, its origin, its development, and its first books (1553-1680) provides another insight into the shift from orality to textuality in English society. The shift to sophisticated textual expression of accounting occurred as a result of the confluence of the rising English Renaissance trade economy, increasing literacy, and improving typographyall of which made the need for extensive financial records necessary and possible. The shift to a highly sophisticated textual/spatial presentation was nurtured by Ramism, Renaissance Italian art, and the rise of capitalism. Ultimately, this spatial presentation destroyed the oral-aural aspect of accounting. Spatial presentation was essential to the development of accounting techniques for an expanding economy, but spatial, rather than verbal, display led to abstraction in presentation that today makes accounting difficult for the nonaccounting reader to understand and for the expert accountant to verbalize.

published proceedings

  • Journal of Business and Technical Communication

author list (cited authors)

  • TEBEAUX, E.

citation count

  • 11

complete list of authors

  • TEBEAUX, ELIZABETH

publication date

  • July 1993