Post Typographic Manifesto
Typography is dead. You have killed it.
You bombard us with empty phrases and the
crass refinement of perfect lives and perfect
design, enforcing the unspoken fascism of your
Typocracy upon generations of our incognizant
brethren. Wielding history as your whip,
you corral those who would dare defy you
towards a Typocratic slaughterhouse wherein
we hear the death-rattle of creativity.
Your design has become an empty gesture,
a reflection of the vacuous society you have
helped to create and perpetuate. It has
been said that the "medium is the message,"
but your medium is transparent and likewise,
your message hollow.
Like a farmer tilling the soil, we are also unafraid to get our hands dirty to reap the fruits of our labor
Type historian and critic Beatrice Ward
compared good modernist typography to a
crystal goblet, a clear, unadorned vessel
that does not cloud the content. Your
shallow cup runneth over with lies and
platitudes. If the letters used to construct
your words are invisible, does not the message
also go unnoticed and unheeded? We step on
your crystal goblet of typography at the
marriage of liberty and design.
The advent of the personal computer and
desktop publishing software promised to overthrow
the Typocratic regime and usher in a new age of
typographic democracy and enlightenment.
But the Typocracy quickly subverted these
technological advances to create a new caste
system composed of the Graphic Design Elite
and the Desktop Publishing Proletariat. The
term, desktop publishing, which had heralded
the great promise of a popular design revolution
quickly took on an undesirable connotation.
It belittled the efforts of untrained designers
and artisans, quashing the unconformist and
unconventional and cutting off avenues of
individualism and experimentation.
We step on your crystal goblet of typography at the marriage of liberty and design.
But even as the Desktop Publishers have been
repressed by the Typocracy, they have sown
the seeds for a rebellion against these tyrants.
We will liberate typography from the stuffy
shackles of classicism and rigid mores of
modernism. We will shun too the ironic and
forced eclecticism of post-modernism in favor
of a valiant and noble design democracy.
The delicate crystal goblet of modernism cannot
contain the volume and passion of our humanity.
We do not seek to create works of grace,
sublimity, and legibility. We only answer to
the ultimate satisfaction of our own
Dionysian impulses.
Like a farmer tilling the soil, we are also
unafraid to get our hands dirty to reap the
fruits of our labor. We dispel the myth of the
invisible designer. We each will carve our
own visage from the faceless screen, and let
the ink from our pens bleed onto our hands and
paper. We will not hesitate to discard X-heights
and baselines to achieve our Post Typographic
ideals, casting off the shackles of Photoshop
to return to the freedom of letters without rules.
The advent of the personal computer and desktop publishing software promised to overthrow the Typocratic regime
We are the children of the Desktop Publishers,
and the siblings of the rebel youth who scratched
the logo of their favorite band into the
cover of their math book.
We are the 32-oz. Big Gulp of Typography!
We are the Typography of The Masses!
We are the Times New Romans!
We are the Franklin Gothics!
We make our impact with Impact!
Never forgetting the struggle of the
Desktop Publishers and those who came before,
we of the Post Typographic movement seek no less
than the democratization of typography. We will
overthrow the Typocracy, and fill its vacuum
with a socially aware and vibrant typographic
freedom embodied by Post Typography.
Brothers and Sisters, join us in shattering the
glass muzzle of Typocracy and renouncing the
indentured servitude of the Typocratic regime.