1.27.2003

Gun Types

It's no coincidence that the gun manufacturer Remington offered America's first typewriter in 1874, writes Barry Sanders in the ever-quirky Cabinet Magazine. Both gun and type-layer utilize the same rifle-stamping equipment in their production, but the similarities don't end there:
The typewriter was a machine in a way that the pencil or the pen was obviously not. No one would ever ask an author, “How many words a minute do you write?” But people do, as a matter of course, ask that question about typing. For typing is a skill in itself, requiring manual dexterity, and a degree of hand/eye coordination. One can refine and master it through practice. The typewriter, by definition, mechanizes writing, the way the rifle mechanizes killing. The cold metal of a rifle or a typewriter insinuates itself between a person and his or her passion. A pen and a knife both have a distinctive immediacy. Both can be deadly. With his usual Dust Bowl brilliance, Woody Guthrie warned that in an America already in deep Depression, you’ve got to watch your back and front, for “some men will kill you with a shotgun, and some with a fountain pen.”
Read this fascinating history.

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