5,025 results on '"HISTORY of the book"'
Search Results
52. Metamorfoza knjige.
- Author
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Kapo, Renata
- Subjects
HISTORY of the book - Abstract
Copyright of Bosniaca is the property of National & University Library of Bosnia & Herzegovina and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
53. "Spectatissimo, Eruditione & Pietate, Insigno Viro": Abraham Rogerius, the Open-Deure, and the Identity of A.W. JCtus.
- Author
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Schilt, Cornelis J.
- Subjects
- *
PRINTING presses , *AFTERLIFE , *HINDUISM , *HISTORY of the book , *THEOLOGIANS , *BIOGRAPHY (Literary form) - Abstract
In 1643, a manuscript was sent from Batavia to Amsterdam. It described in vivid detail a world virtually unknown to the West, that of South-Indian Hinduism, taken from the words of local Brahmins and drawn up by VOC minister Abraham Rogerius. It was not until 1651 that De Open-Deure tot het Verborgen Heydendom appeared from the presses of the Leiden printing house of François Hackius. By then, its author had died, and circumstances regarding the actual publication are shrouded in mystery. This is also true about the life of Abraham Rogerius and the identity of the Open-Deure's anonymous editor, A.W. JCtus. Traditionally associated with the Polish Socinian theologian Andreas Wissowatius, A.W's annotations added a wealth of scholarly detail to Rogerius plain narrative. In this paper, I greatly expand upon the existing biographies of Rogerius and draw lines between the various actors involved with the eventual publication of his writings. I provide a fresh insight into the editorial history and afterlife of the Open-Deure, showing that there are in fact two different editions that diverge at key points. Moreover, I demonstrate that the elusive A.W. JCtus is most certainly not Wissowatius, but instead the Leiden lawyer and politician Arnoldus Wittens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
54. Routes of Translation: Connected Book Histories and al-Jazari's Robotic Wonders from the Mamluks to Mandu.
- Author
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Gupta, Vivek
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of the book , *TRANSLATING & interpreting , *FIFTEENTH century , *ROBOTICS , *CURIOSITIES & wonders - Abstract
Over the course of the long fifteenth century, scholars and books moved across regions and spurred transcreations of numerous Islamicate manuscripts in South Asia. This essay undertakes a close reading of an early sixteenth-century Persian transcreation—that is, a translation in both form and content—of a twelfth-century Arabic compendium on mechanical devices. I examine what the historical event of translation in the South Asian region of Malwa and town of Mandu meant as it is read amidst cultural flows between Mamluk Egypt, Yemen, Mecca, and Hindustan. By analyzing the colophons of early Arabic copies of al-Jazari's Compendium of Theory and Useful Practice for the Fabrication of Machines along with Da'ud Shadiyabadi's Wonders of Mechanics in Persian, this study demonstrates how Shadiyabadi's translation distances itself from al-Jazari's book. As Shadiyabadi's Wonders of Mechanics becomes the standard Persian translation of al-Jazari—appearing in subsequent Mughal and Iranian copies—the work of a scholar from a small North-Central Indian court links scholars, sultanates, and regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
55. From the Interstices of History: Rethinking Regional Polity in North India and the Deccan, 14th–16th Centuries.
- Author
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Ali, Daud
- Subjects
- *
SIXTEENTH century , *INSCRIPTIONS , *POLITICAL systems , *STATE power , *COSMOPOLITANISM , *HISTORICAL geography , *HISTORY of the book , *SOCIAL forces - Abstract
This article examines the concept of "regions" in North India and the Deccan during the 14th-16th centuries. It questions the usefulness of regional perspectives in historical interpretation, given the prevalence of regional developments and the growth of regionalism during this time. The article discusses the presence of small independent kingdoms in northern and central India and their impact on the geopolitical landscape. It also explores the historiography of regional polity, highlighting a shift towards more nuanced understandings of regional societies and polities. The text argues for a reevaluation of the historiography of medieval India, challenging the traditional narrative of the Delhi Sultanate and emphasizing the importance of considering multiple perspectives and sources to understand the regional dynamics of this period. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
56. "Spectatissimo, Eruditione & Pietate, Insigno Viro": Abraham Rogerius, the Open-Deure, and the Identity of A.W. JCtus.
- Author
-
Schilt, Cornelis J.
- Subjects
PRINTING presses ,AFTERLIFE ,HINDUISM ,HISTORY of the book ,THEOLOGIANS ,BIOGRAPHY (Literary form) - Abstract
In 1643, a manuscript was sent from Batavia to Amsterdam. It described in vivid detail a world virtually unknown to the West, that of South-Indian Hinduism, taken from the words of local Brahmins and drawn up by VOC minister Abraham Rogerius. It was not until 1651 that De Open-Deure tot het Verborgen Heydendom appeared from the presses of the Leiden printing house of François Hackius. By then, its author had died, and circumstances regarding the actual publication are shrouded in mystery. This is also true about the life of Abraham Rogerius and the identity of the Open-Deure's anonymous editor, A.W. JC
tus . Traditionally associated with the Polish Socinian theologian Andreas Wissowatius, A.W's annotations added a wealth of scholarly detail to Rogerius plain narrative. In this paper, I greatly expand upon the existing biographies of Rogerius and draw lines between the various actors involved with the eventual publication of his writings. I provide a fresh insight into the editorial history and afterlife of the Open-Deure, showing that there are in fact two different editions that diverge at key points. Moreover, I demonstrate that the elusive A.W. JCtus is most certainly not Wissowatius, but instead the Leiden lawyer and politician Arnoldus Wittens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
57. Ancient Letters and Old Paper: How Matthew Parker (1504–1575) Understood Medieval Books.
- Author
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McMahon, Madeline
- Subjects
- *
ALCHEMY , *HISTORY of the book , *PALEOGRAPHY , *ANNOTATIONS - Abstract
This article examines the efforts of Matthew Parker and his scholarly circle to understand the medieval books that he collected as archbishop of Canterbury. It argues that Parker made sense of his books by connecting them to what amounted to an emerging history of the book. That is, Parker began to piece together the formal features of different medieval books into a rough but increasingly refined timeline of the history of book production in order to contextualize any given manuscript. The evidence can be found scattered throughout Parker's library, in the form of annotations, transcripts of passages, copied illustrations, and printed books that offer a wealth of information about how Parker's team understood the books they handled. This documentation reveals how they combined scribal knowledge with textual information, to powerful ends. By connecting Parker's practices to contemporary developments in other areas of knowledge production, from alchemy to conjectural emendation, this article offers a new way forward for scholarly analysis of the early modern study of older books, especially for our analysis of early modern practices and paradigms that do not fit modern definitions of paleography and codicology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
58. Unpopular Literature? John Heywood's The Spider and the Flie.
- Author
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Walker, Greg
- Subjects
- *
POPULAR literature , *HISTORY of the book , *BANNED books , *SIXTEENTH century , *LEGAL history , *INSURGENCY , *PROVERBS - Abstract
This article examines an idiosyncratic, lavishly illustrated mid-Tudor English printed book, John Heywood's The Spider and the Flie (1556), a book condemned both in the sixteenth century and since as incomprehensible and virtually unreadable. The article argues, rather, that the book's gestation period was long and complex, but that, once this is understood, the book becomes readily comprehensible, in both its structure and implications. It looks briefly at evidence for ownership of the book, and then moves to discuss what it, along with Heywood's collected volumes of proverbs and epigrams, can contribute to a discussion of early-modern popular literature, the subject of the UNA Europa funded network, Popular Respublica Litteraria, to which this article is a contribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
59. The book history of Rona M. Fields's A Society on the Run (1973): A case study in the alleged suppression of psychological research on Northern Ireland.
- Author
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Miller, Gavin
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of the book , *PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *REPUTATION , *PROFESSIONAL standards , *PSYCHOLOGISTS - Abstract
The US psychologist Rona M. Field's book A Society on the Run (1973) offered a psychological account of the nature and effects of the Northern Irish Troubles at their peak in the early 1970s. The book was withdrawn shortly after publication by its publisher, Penguin Books Limited, and never reissued. Fields alleged publicly that the book had been suppressed by the British state, a claim that has often been treated uncritically. Local Northern Irish psychologists suggested that the book was taken off the market because of its scientific deficiencies. Rigorous book‐historical investigation using Penguin editorial fields reveals, however, that what might appear to be a case of state suppression, or an instance of disciplinary boundary work, can be explained instead by the commercial interests and professional standards of a publisher keen to preserve its reputation for quality and reliability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
60. (Re)producing the English Printed Past
- Author
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André de Melo Araújo
- Subjects
History of Knowledge ,Antiquarianism ,Empiricism ,History of the Book ,Joseph Ames ,Typographical Antiquities (1749) ,History (General) ,D1-2009 ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,AZ20-999 - Abstract
In this paper, I investigate how Joseph Ames construed knowledge about the past as he examined early English printed artifacts. I analyze Ames’s Typographical Antiquities (1749) and three main groups of handwritten sources directly related to his editorial project. In a first step, I follow Ames’s papers to showcase how an eighteenth-century antiquarian developed a laborious system for managing bibliographical data, about which he was either informed or which he had judiciously observed. The second part of the paper delves into the groundbreaking innovation of the book published in 1749: the study and classification of types. Here, I explore how evidence of the English printed past was not only collected and classified but also (re)produced in Ames’s printed work. In the third and fourth steps, I investigate how the plates commissioned in the eighteenth century for the English Typographical Antiquities could authoritatively visualize fifteenth-century (typo)graphical evidence. Here, handwritten, drawn, and printed testimonies related to the making of those plates reveal that an empirical approach to the material remains of the past was pivotal to the construction of early modern knowledge.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
61. Lorenzo Baldacchini, ‘Il mio lungo viaggio tra libro antico e biblioteche’, Manziana, Vecchiarelli, 2021
- Author
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Paolo Tinti
- Subjects
lorenzo baldacchini ,history of the book ,ancient book ,libraries ,Bibliography. Library science. Information resources - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
62. Notices.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of the book , *ART history , *CONCEPTUAL history , *EUROPEAN history , *INTELLECTUAL history , *MEDIEVAL music , *PHILOSOPHY of science - Abstract
The article offers news briefs related to various notices. Nathan Vedal won the prize for his book "The Culture of Language in Ming China: Sound, Script, and the Redefinition of Boundaries of Knowledge". The Institute for Advanced Study provides opportunities for scholars worldwide to pursue research, offering both stipendiary and non-stipendiary memberships. The Institute of Intellectual History at the University of St Andrews includes scholars from diverse disciplines.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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63. De wereld van de familie Blaeu,.
- Author
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Moorman, Gloria
- Subjects
- *
EARLY modern history , *HISTORY of the book , *EXTENDED families , *SEVENTEENTH century , *ART historians , *VISUAL culture , *MIRACLES - Abstract
Kees Zandvliet's book, "De wereld van de familie Blaeu," challenges the traditional narrative surrounding the Blaeu family, famous printer-publishers during the Dutch seventeenth century. Zandvliet argues that the reputation of the Blaeus as embodying a Golden Age of ascent, extension, and decline is an inadequate story of national success. Instead, he presents a nuanced picture of struggle, success, competition, and collaboration that is more persuasive and culturally sensitive. The book also highlights the role of female agency in the male-dominated Dutch Republic and sheds light on the underrepresented individuals, such as women and the enslaved, who contributed to the visual and material splendor of the Dutch seventeenth century. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
64. Los trabajos de las mujeres en la Edad Moderna. Centros de interés para el diseño de situaciones de aprendizaje.
- Author
-
Vega Gómez, Carlos
- Subjects
HISTORY textbooks ,WOMEN'S employment ,HISTORICAL analysis ,MODERN history ,SECONDARY education ,WOMEN'S roles ,HISTORY of the book - Abstract
Copyright of Ensayos: Revista de la Facultad de Educacion de Albacete is the property of Ensayos Revista de la Facultad de Educacion de Albacete and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
65. [Book Review] Teaching the History of the Book, edited by Matteo Pangallo and Emily B. Todd
- Author
-
David Lemmons
- Subjects
book history ,history of the book ,Education (General) ,L7-991 - Abstract
Book review of Teaching the History of the Book, edited by Matteo Pangallo and Emily B. Todd.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
66. Understanding the Design Values of Baby Books: Materiality, Co-presence, and Remediation.
- Author
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Walsh, Jacqueline Reid and Rouse, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
BABY books , *BOOK design , *CHILDREN'S books , *HISTORY of the book , *PERCEPTUAL motor learning - Abstract
In this article we analyze the design values of selected baby books published in England, the United States and Italy across 100 years. The examples we focus on are What is This? What is That? (1905) of the Dean's Rag books series, Pat the Bunny (1940), I PRELIBRI (1980), and Wiggle! March! (2009) of the Indestructibles series. We group these books into two pairs of simple or complex designs, based on either a drive for durability or the aim to provide a multisensory experience: the Dean's Rag books and the Indestructibles form one set, and Pat the Bunny and I PRELIBRI the second. We approach the books by examining the relationships among the materiality, narrative and formal design elements, the implied co-presence of a young child and adult care, issues of context and gender, and how the later examples remediate or rework the materials and beliefs of the earlier ones in a contemporary manner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
67. AVRUPA'DA DEDE KORKUT KİTABI HAKKINDA YAPILAN ÇALIŞMALAR ÜZERİNE GENEL BİR DEĞERLENDİRME.
- Author
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AKSOY, Üyesi Hüseyin and DUMAN, Mustafa
- Subjects
- *
ONLINE library catalogs , *LANGUAGE & languages , *RECOMMENDED books , *HISTORY of the book , *BIBLIOGRAPHY , *ONLINE databases , *BIBLIOGRAPHIC databases - Abstract
Studies carried out in Europe are of great importance in terms of the history of the Book of Dede Korkut studies. The present study is based on the analytical evaluation of studies conducted in Europe on the Book of Dede Korkut and in foreign languages spoken in Europe. For the list of academic studies in this article, previous bibliographic studies, European and USA-centered databases/online catalogs were utilized. The bibliographic list obtained was classified as "translations" and "selected other works". This study, which has a descriptive character in terms of presenting a bibliographic list on the Book of Dede Korkut, can also be accepted as an analytical review in terms of a holistic evaluation of the studies in question. The present study, which aims to bring the studies on the Book of Dede Korkut in foreign languages to the attention of scholars who read and write in Turkish, to determine the general tendencies of the Dede Korkut researches in Europe and to make a general evaluation based on these determinations, has the purpose of contributing to the corpus of the Book of Dede Korkut researches. In addition, in the light of the data and evaluations put forward, it can be considered as another aim of the article to direct new studies on the Book of Dede Korkut. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
68. A. Hilfsmittel und Periodika.
- Subjects
HISTORY of the book ,HISTORIOGRAPHY ,GERMAN literature - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
69. Breaking New Ground: C. Leonard Woolley's Archaeology Talks on the BBC, 1922–1939.
- Author
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Maloigne, Hélène
- Subjects
- *
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations , *HISTORY of the book , *RADIO audiences , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *RADIO programming , *ARCHIVAL resources - Abstract
This article explores archaeological programmes on the BBC between 1922 and 1939 through an entangled approach to broadcast and printed talks. Supported by archival sources and programme schedules in The Radio Times and The Listener, it focuses on the intertwined archaeological, broadcasting and publishing careers of Charles Leonard Woolley based on his excavation at Ur in southern Iraq. This highlights the important place archaeology held in the interwar listening and reading market with the BBC offering high fees for a popular speaker. Incorporating periodical studies and aspects of book history demonstrates the importance of an integrated approach to media history to further our understanding of the relationship between media, science and the public. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
70. Dostoevsky's Doctor: Active Love in Modern Medicine and The Brothers Karamazov.
- Author
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Petriceks, Aldis H.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of the book , *PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout , *MEDICINE , *ART , *SPIRITUALITY , *MEDICAL personnel , *MEDICAL care , *COMPASSION , *PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *ATTENTION , *LOVE , *PATIENT care , *PHILOSOPHY , *SCIENCE - Abstract
In this essay, the author draws from The Brothers Karamazov, a novel by Fyodor Dostoevsky, to consider the idea of love and its relevance to burnout in modern medicine. They argue that active love, as espoused by one of Dostoevsky's characters, might help clinicians care for their patients even in moments of exhaustion or disillusion. Coherent with Dostoevsky's Christian background, the author examines active love alongside the Christian concept of grace and Simone Weil's concept of attention. These explorations may yield fresh insights for clinicians struggling with burnout in health care, as well as those striving to master the timeless art of caregiving. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
71. "To have a printer at hand": Jesuits and the Dissemination of Printing in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth before 1620.
- Author
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Komorowska, Magdalena
- Subjects
- *
PRINTING presses , *SIXTEENTH century , *HISTORY of the book , *COUNTER-Reformation ,JESUIT history ,POLISH history - Abstract
In the second half of the sixteenth century, the Jesuits considered the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth a missionary territory. This perception was linked to the exceptional writing and publishing activity. The Jesuits not only had about seven hundred editions of their writings published before 1620, they also established their own printing presses. This article identifies the main purposes of Jesuit publishing activity, demonstrates the Society's proficiency with various printed media and reflects on their role in the dissemination of printing craft throughout the Commonwealth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
72. Jesuits and Print: the Polemical Example of John Hay.
- Author
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Lamal, Nina and Machielsen, Jan
- Subjects
- *
HAY , *SELF-esteem , *HISTORY of the book , *CATALOGS - Abstract
This introductory article employs the Scottish Jesuit John Hay as a starting point for a wider exploration of the relationship between Jesuits and print, the theme of this special issue. Hay demonstrates how important print could be to a Jesuit's self-worth and identity. In this, as contemporary catalogs of Jesuit publications attest, he was not alone, but he was a controversial outlier. Hay's superiors prevented him from continuing a vociferous polemical exchange and appeared to guide him towards a more suitable subject: translations of missionary reports. Hay's career in print points to the importance of geography and context in shaping Jesuit publications, and to the conflicts between individual authorial projects and institutional restraints. His example shows above all that the commonplace equation of Jesuits with print requires urgent historical investigation. The essays presented here seek to remedy this oversight by paying attention to Jesuits as authors, printers, and readers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
73. Spaces of Thought: A Response to Critiques.
- Author
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Janz, Bruce B.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of the book , *AFRICAN philosophy , *COGNITION - Abstract
The author of African Philosophy and Enactivist Cognition: The Space of Thought responds to four critiques of his book. After giving some context and history of the book, he addresses points raised by each of the readers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
74. Footprints: A Digital Approach to (Jewish) Book History.
- Author
-
Margolis, Michelle, Lehman, Marjorie, Shear, Adam, and Teplitsky, Joshua
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of the book , *DIGITAL footprint , *DIGITAL humanities , *RELATIONAL databases , *TWENTY-first century , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL assemblages , *SIXTEENTH century - Abstract
This article describes and analyzes the methods of Footprints: Jewish Books Through Time and Place , a digital humanities contribution to book history. Footprints collects and aggregates information about the movement of copies of Hebrew books and books of Judaica in other languages printed in the early modern period (roughly corresponding to the hand-press era) and follows evidence of their movement into the twenty-first century. It stores this information in a relational database in which users can run specific queries and delivers the results in a number of visual representations for analysis and interpretation. Footprints undertakes two concurrent and more open-ended aims: (1) the on-going assemblage of a dataset about post-print mobility based on evidence other than the printed text (e.g. marginalia, catalog records, archival letters, other printed texts); and (2) the creation and iterative refining of a scholarly instrument to analyze the dataset through computational methods and modes of representation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
75. Unread, yet preserved: A case study on survival of the 19th-century printed poetry.
- Author
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Martynenko, Antonina
- Subjects
- *
NINETEENTH century , *ANTHOLOGIES , *COLLECTING of accounts , *NUMBERS of species , *POETRY (Literary form) , *HISTORY of the book - Abstract
Distant reading promises access to "the great unread", which should allow scholars to rethink the history of literature. However, the rise in volume of data does not guarantee the understanding of a corpus and its relation to the literary population. This article discusses how a "complete" corpus of the 19th-century poetry books in Russian might be collected with account for historical data and potential survivorship bias. Even if bibliographical sources cannot provide a complete list of books printed in a given period, the amount of "incompleteness" can be directly estimated with the unseen species models. The estimation of survival ratios for printed poetry shows differences in the loss rate across different types of sources: with conventional editions, like books and anthologies, are well-preserved, while booklets and pamphlets are the largest expected source of loss. These findings allow us to estimate what an "exhaustive" corpus can look like and define the features of "the unread" and "unseen" inside it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
76. صورة خمفاء بني العباس) 132هـ / 247هـ ( في كتب المتأخرين تأريخ الخمفاء لمسيوطي أنموذج.
- Author
-
د. اياد صالح عاصي 
- Subjects
HISTORY of the book ,FIFTEENTH century ,SCIENTIFIC language ,NARRATION ,LINGUISTICS ,SPECIAL elections - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Babylon Center for Humanities Studies is the property of Republic of Iraq Ministry of Higher Education & Scientific Research (MOHESR) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
77. Działalność Pracowni Wiedzy o Dawnej Książce Instytutu Historii Nauki PAN w 2022 r.
- Author
-
Kaliszuk, Jerzy
- Subjects
RARE books ,DOCUMENTATION ,SCIENTIFIC discoveries ,MANUSCRIPTS ,RARE library materials ,EARLY printed books - Abstract
The article presents the achievements of the Old and Rare Book Studies Research Unit in 2022 in the scope of documentation, scientific, and popularization activities. The research conducted by the Unit members primarily focused on the Manuscripta.pl project, which led to new and significant discoveries concerning medieval manuscripts, the history of book collections and individual codices. In addition to the work related to the implementation of the NPRH project, team members also participated in other scientific projects and carried out individual research activities, resulting in the publication of scientific articles and presentations at academic conferences. Significant efforts were also made in the area of science popularization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
78. 尤侗«西堂杂组»金阊雅琴堂刊本考 ———兼论单刻本与全集本之关系.
- Author
-
潘建国
- Subjects
HISTORY of the book ,INSCRIPTIONS ,PUBLISHED reprints ,ENGRAVING - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Soochow University Philosophy & Social Sciences Edition is the property of Soochow University and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
79. Grants and other opportunities.
- Subjects
COLLEGE scholarships ,PDF (Computer file format) ,ENGLISH letters ,MEDIEVAL manuscripts ,HISTORY of the book - Abstract
The document is a newsletter from the Australian Association of Jewish Studies, providing information on grants and other opportunities. It mentions a project led by four teams in collaboration with the National Library of Israel and Haifa University, which aims to use computational methods to analyze medieval Hebrew manuscripts. The newsletter also announces two doctoral scholarships in the field of Hebrew Palaeography and Manuscript Studies at the École Pratique des Hautes Études, PSLUniversity in Paris, France. Additionally, it mentions a postdoctoral fellowship at Yale University's Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies, specifically focusing on Ladino and Sephardic history. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
80. 'Fair copies?' : Titus Oates and the forging of literary politics in seventeenth-century England
- Author
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Robinson, Isabel, Loxley, James, and Mole, Thomas
- Subjects
history of the book ,Titus Oates ,fictive allegations ,book-as-object ,textual instability ,seventeenth century rhetoric - Abstract
In recent decades a resurgent History of the Book has helped to challenge the idea that the printed page is one constituted by words alone. Similarly, for all its critical indeterminacy the methods of New Historicism have invited us to consider how language, and its capacity to act, might have shaped the material and intellectual contexts of books, their reception and their consumption. Observing the principle that all texts are essentially objects culturally produced, both strands of scholarship have been united in a desire to resist the assumption that the 'literary' exists in a category quite apart from that which might be political or social. Yet as commonplace as these perceptions may be, their reach has yet to be fully extended into the realms of conspiracy and its popular representation within the late Stuart era. This thesis aims to correct that, using the 'fictive' allegations of Titus Oates and his Popish Plot to reflect more broadly on the intersection between popular literature and popular politics in this crucial era of state development. Indeed, in light of the received view that literature is a project defined in contradistinction to a 'culture of fact', it is argued that the 'imaginary politics' of Titus Oates are a vehicle particularly well suited to attending to these and related perceptions of the book-as-object as they bear on politics and politicking in Restoration England. The thesis thus maintains throughout a dual definition of plots and plotting, being both literary and political in nature, and investigating how those two domains may have been mutually influential. Chapter One demonstrates how the many linguistic determinations of the word 'plot' shared in the seventeenth century significant areas of conceptual overlap. Whether geodetically, militarily, or literarily defined this, it will be shown, was a fertile period for plotting and its conceptual development, as it was for language more broadly. With spelling not yet formalised, but print and its capacity to reach an ever-greater number of people increasing, it will be argued that this moment is especially susceptible to the merging of literary and political spheres. Chapter Two then attends directly to Titus Oates and the representation of his Plot during the height of its popular reception. It draws on a concept of text-as-textile, that is, as a material construct whose literary substance is one also thematically knitted together, in order to move away from the strict binaries which have so often beleaguered Oates criticism. Drawing on the work of critical and literary theorists, especially Lennard Davis' concept of 'factual fiction', it will argue that aspects of Oates' text can be placed on the same developmental trajectory as the early novel; primarily it takes the view that Oates' Popish Plot text was essentially a publication undergoing a process of dialogue with itself, about itself. A role for rhetorical ambiguity thus established, Chapter Three then turns to Oates' waning popularity. Specifically, it engages with an under-acknowledged discourse of the era which sought to vividly unmask Oates and the character of his deception by way of a combined verbal and visual reckoning. Crucially, it is shown that contemporaries deployed as their own many of the same linguistic strategies formerly endorsed by Oates, demonstrating the era's inescapable fascination with ambiguity even as it sought to denounce it. Individually, each of these three chapters contributes to one or a number of key literary debates as they emerged at varying intervals throughout the seventeenth century. Cumulatively, the thesis progressively builds toward a greater understanding of how the literary and the political realms were often twinned in both purpose and outlook at a time when textual instability was still the norm.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
81. Problematising the preface : empowering the reader in Thomas Berthelet's print output
- Author
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Lowe, Katherine, Matthews, David, and Schurink, Fred
- Subjects
686.2 ,Thomas Berthelet ,History of the book ,Paratexts ,Printers ,Early modern readers - Abstract
This thesis analyses the discourses that come before the main text in works produced during the early years of the print market in England, to argue that rather than being an advertising feature or a method of controlling reader interpretation, the space was a site of mediation, and even collaboration between the various individuals and groups involved in the production, dissemination and reception of the work. I demonstrate that the form and function of the space could shift and change to accommodate the needs of each of these groups, and as a result, the work itself could acquire multiple layers of meaning, ultimately affecting the relationship between text and reader. I show that these sites were dynamic; they did not have definitive responsibilities or adhere to strict definitions. This allows me to explore reading practices more broadly, and argue that these spaces were significant in getting readers to think, in an analytical, rather than in a specific or cursory way. I consider how the space was used in a range of texts printed by Thomas Berthelet, a central, but elusive, figure in the English print market whose career spanned three decades, three monarchs and the dissolution of the Catholic Church in England. The texts studied in most detail include a book on land management, The Book of Surveying, by John Fitzherbert; translations by Margaret More Roper, Richard Hyrde and William Thomas on the subject of female conduct; works by Thomas Elyot, most especially his Dictionary and The Image of Governance; and A Glasse of the Truthe and The Kings Book, both supposedly written in collaboration with King Henry VIII. Closely analysing the narratives created in the prefatory discourses to these texts reveals that writers across various genres were using the space in order to more evenly distribute interpretive authority amongst those who would at some point engage with the text. The pre-text, or paratext, I argue, destabilises the objectives of many of these works which purportedly reflect the interests of the political, cultural, and intellectual elite. More widely this thesis challenges notions of the printed text as a definitive or complete artefact, used as a way of inscribing the social or cultural predominance of one group over another. By interrupting dominant narratives and encouraging more critical engagement with literary texts, the paratext does not reflect a static, hierarchical dissemination of information from above. In this space, the production of knowledge is not linear, but rather complex and multidimensional. Recognising this as a sustained feature of works produced by Berthelet will contribute to a more nuanced understanding of the relationship between textual producers and readers. In the absence of biographical evidence, it also brings his career into focus, showing that Berthelet was a printer continually aligned with these equivocal narratives. Overall, this thesis argues that early sixteenth-century prefatory discourses were utilised by textual producers and readers in order to interrogate various aspects of early modern hegemony, and that they provided a much more significant and complex way of articulating socio-political relationships than has previously been recognised.
- Published
- 2020
82. L'Entour du texte: La publication du livre savant à la Renaissance.
- Author
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Bayerl, Corinne
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of printing , *ACADEMIC discourse , *SOCIAL history , *HISTORY of the book , *SIXTEENTH century , *PARATEXT - Abstract
This article is a review of the book "L'Entour du texte: La publication du livre savant à la Renaissance" by Ann Blair. The book introduces Francophone readers to the use of paratexts in early modern learned books. It discusses the main forms and functions of paratexts, such as title pages, dedications, prefaces, and indexes, and explores their role in the social history of printing. The author argues that paratexts were worth controlling and had different hopes and anxieties for authors and printers. The book provides concise and reliable information about paratexts and offers methodological suggestions for studying them. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
83. The history of political thought: a very short introduction: by Richard Whatmore, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2021, 160 pp., £8.99/$11.95 (pb), ISBN 978-0-198853725.
- Author
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Mills, R. J. W.
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL philosophy , *POLITICAL science , *POWER (Social sciences) , *POLITICAL doctrines , *GENOCIDE , *HISTORY of the book - Abstract
We are living through a cultural moment in which strident criticisms are being made of the ethical validity and utility of the discipline of the history of political thought (H.P.T.). In Whatmore, the subject has a champion who makes a bold case for H.P.T.'s importance, defends it against often mistaken criticisms, yet also incorporates the productive elements of recent critiques. Whatmore's confidence in H.P.T.'s ability to inform current political thinking stems from the tenets that "past generations have faced comparable predicaments" and past generations have "experienced everything, and nothing at all is new" (8). [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
84. Georgina Colby, Kaja Marczewska and Leigh Wilson, eds. 2020. The Contemporary Small Press: Making Publishing Visible. New Directions in Book History. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. xvii + 281 pp. US$129.99. Hardback. ISBN: 978-3-030-48783-6. Also available in eBook, e-ISBN: 978-3-030-48784-3
- Author
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Martire, Jodie Lea
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of the book , *ELECTRONIC books , *PUBLISHING , *HISTORY of publishing , *ESSAY collections - Abstract
"The Contemporary Small Press: Making Publishing Visible" is a collection of essays edited by Georgina Colby, Kaja Marczewska, and Leigh Wilson. The book explores the world of small presses in the UK and the US, with a focus on their history, artistry, and impact on the publishing industry. The essays cover a range of topics, including the relationship between small presses and modernist experiments, the publishing history of black poet Gwendolyn Brooks, and the role of small presses in promoting inclusive literature. While the book provides valuable insights into the small press sector, it acknowledges the challenge of comprehensively representing such a diverse and extensive industry. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
85. Cut/copy/paste: fragments from the history of bookwork: by Whitney Trettien, Minneapolis, MN, University of Minnesota Press, 2021, 328 pp., $28.00 (paperback), ISBN: 978-1-5179-0409-8.
- Author
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Reynolds, Anna
- Subjects
DIGITAL humanities ,HISTORY of the book ,HISTORY of technology ,SCHOLARLY publishing ,BIBLIOGRAPHY - Abstract
In I Cut/Copy/Paste i , Whitney Trettien focuses on what she terms "bookwork" - the "creative-critical" (263) act of producing textual assemblages - in the seventeenth century. At the centre of I Cut/Copy/Paste i are the material and intellectual practices that can be deciphered in the books, produced by these textual practitioners, that survive in libraries and archives. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
86. Kant en el kiosco. La masificación del libro en la Argentina.
- Author
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de Diego, José Luis
- Subjects
HISTORY of the book ,MASS media ,HISTORY of publishing ,PUBLIC sociology ,CRITICISM - Abstract
Copyright of Orbis Tertius is the property of Universidad Nacional de La Plata and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
87. Contributors.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of the book , *CANADIAN literature , *AFRICANA studies , *EDUCATIONAL background , *BOOK industry , *CANADIAN history , *AFRICAN American literature , *CHILDREN'S literature - Abstract
This document provides a list of contributors to the journal Book History. The contributors come from various academic backgrounds and specialize in different areas of research related to literature, publishing, and book history. Their research interests include children's literature, medical and erotic print networks, early modern printing, Canadian literatures, religion and reading, the history of the book trade, and African American studies. The contributors are affiliated with universities and research institutions in France, Canada, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Germany. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
88. Sibyls, destruction, and loss in the context of reproductive science.
- Author
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Borchardt, Francis
- Subjects
- *
FATHERS , *KNOWLEDGE transfer , *HISTORY of the book , *INTERGENERATIONAL relations , *CORRUPTION , *FALLOWING , *FATHER-son relationship , *VIGNETTES - Abstract
The sixth-century prologue to a collection of Sibylline Oracles introduces the anthology according to a pattern recognizable in prologues to a number of texts of the period. It begins by praising the oracles for the great value they have for readers. But then, it introduces a problem: the oracles have suffered from destruction, loss, and corruption at several points in their history. The prologue goes on to offer a solution: the creation of the very anthology of Sibylline Oracles being produced. The rhetorical function of such a prologue is clear: It ensures the value of Sibylline Oracles while simultaneously demonstrating the utility, or even necessity of the newly created collection. Of interest in this study is the way the prologue introduces and illustrates the problem of destruction, loss, and corruption. In no less than three different vignettes, the prologue shows how the oracles are especially resistant to preservation. And these instances are not alone. A discourse of sibylline loss circulated around the textual world of antiquity. This study argues that the discourse is best understood within the framework of ancient ideals concerning intergenerational transfers of knowledge from fathers to sons, and some ancient theories of reproductive science, which held that only men contained reproductive potential, while women were empty vessels or fallow fields waiting to be filled. The article concludes that sibyls are so frequently sites of loss and destruction of knowledge because, as women, they are believed to lack the capacity to reproduce themselves both intellectually and biologically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
89. A jubilee of fifty books known only by title.
- Author
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Brownsmith, Esther, Lied, Liv Ingeborg, and Kartzow, Marianne Bjelland
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of the book , *CHRISTIANITY , *ISLAM , *BOOK titles , *RECOMMENDED books - Abstract
This article ends the special issue that aims to introduce the conception of "books known only by title" as a fruitful new focus of research. In this article, we include an annotated assortment of books known only by title. This collection of fifty such books is not exhaustive, but it may serve as an inspiration and a springboard for future researchers by demonstrating the breadth and rich diversity of this phenomenon. To aid such research, we have provided bibliographic information for each entry. We also discuss ways of categorizing these books and the challenges of those categorizations. The list is hardly exhaustive, but it is selective. Our examples center on the first millennium C.E., and they center on the traditions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Certain entries may push at those boundaries but were included because of their special interest to us. Most notably, the classical texts of Greco-Roman culture were not included; nor were the canons of East Asia, or many other literary cultures across the globe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
90. The Early Political Thought and Publishing Career of V. K. Krishna Menon, 1928–1938.
- Author
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Bowman, Jack
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL philosophy , *POLITICAL participation , *HISTORY of the book , *INTERWAR Period (1918-1939) , *REFERENDUM ,HISTORY of India ,BRITISH colonies - Abstract
This article assesses Indian activist V. K. Krishna Menon's early political thought, formed during his years in Britain prior to Indian independence. It argues that this was more nuanced than has been previously characterized, with a range of influences and foundations. To analyse the formation and evolution of Menon's political thought, it looks at his political actions from this period, which largely fall into three areas; the India League, his engagement with the British Left, and his publishing career. His editorial work is what often tied together these strands of political action and was where his political thought manifested and expressed itself. This article analyses Menon's publishing career from roughly 1928 to 1938, highlighting the engagement of the three strands of his political action, before undertaking a book history of the India League text Condition of India. The article is a continuation of the expansion of book histories of twentieth-century empire, and argues for a reassessment of anti-colonial texts and figures along these lines, whilst also contributing to the growing historiographical trend that seeks to recast modern Indian political thought, as well as the politics of internationalist activists in interwar Britain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
91. Early Modern Herbals and the Book Trade: English Stationers and the Commodification of Botany.
- Author
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Nicosia, Marissa
- Subjects
- *
BOOK industry , *BOTANY , *COMMODIFICATION , *HISTORY of the book , *BOTANICAL illustration - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
92. Unter einem „neuen Himmel"? Wachstum und Wandel im juristischen Publikationswesen an der Wende zum 20. Jahrhundert.
- Author
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Kästle-Lamparter, David
- Subjects
HISTORY of the book ,HISTORY of publishing ,CIVIL code ,SCIENCE & industry ,LEGAL literature ,SCHOLARLY publishing - Abstract
Around 1900, legal literature and publishing in Germany underwent a significant process of expansion and transformation. This development is, in part, due to the codification of important areas of law, especially the advent of the German Civil Code. The new codes instigated a vast quantity of legal literature; legal commentaries took the lead in explaining the new law. However, it is only through a look at the history of books and publishing, as well as the general history of science, that the development of legal literature can be fully appreciated. This paper shows that the growth and transformation of legal literature before and after 1900 is part of a larger development, i.e. the emergence of a literary mass-market, on the one hand, and the formation of what Adolf von Harnack called a 'large-scale industry of science', on the other hand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
93. Psychotherapy by Reciprocal Inhibition : Wolpe's unique legacy to the evolution of cognitive–behavioural therapy.
- Author
-
Carona, Carlos, Ramos, Kevin, and Salvador, Céu
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOTHERAPY , *BEHAVIOR therapy , *CLINICAL psychology , *BRIEF psychotherapy , *HISTORY of the book - Abstract
SUMMARY: The book Psychotherapy by Reciprocal Inhibition (1968) is widely acclaimed as the masterwork of Joseph Wolpe, a great pioneer in the development of behavioural therapy, and is considered one of the most influential books in the history of clinical psychology. In this article, a brief biography of Wolpe is followed by a critical review of the book that illustrates his major contributions to the evolution of cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT) as the most empirically supported model of psychotherapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
94. A circulação dos primeiros ritos maçônicos manuscritos e impressos no Brasil (1810-1836).
- Author
-
Iglesias Magalhães, Pablo Antonio
- Abstract
Copyright of Tempo (1413-7704) is the property of Universidade Federal Fluminense, Departamento de Historia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
95. Acute dizziness: A personal journey through a paradigm shift.
- Author
-
Edlow, Jonathan A.
- Subjects
HISTORY of the book ,DIZZINESS ,PARADIGMS (Social sciences) ,EXPERIENCE ,CRITICAL care medicine ,PHILOSOPHY ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,EMERGENCY medicine - Abstract
In the article, the author discusses the challenges in the diagnosis of dizziness and other similar conditions like benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) and acute vestibular syndrome (AVS). Other topics include the book "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions" by Thomas Kuhn and how the paradigm about dizziness has shifted.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
96. 'Archaeology is but Ethnology in the past tense'. Theoretical Proofs and Intellectual Technologies in André Leroi-Gourhan's Archived Archéologie du Pacifique-Nord, 1946.
- Author
-
Schlanger, Nathan
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Bulletin of the History of Archaeology is the property of Ubiquity Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
97. Stories of the Port: Response to Isabel Hofmeyr, Dockside Reading: Hydrocolonialism and the Custom House.
- Author
-
Srivastava, Neelam
- Subjects
- *
POSTCOLONIALISM , *HISTORY of the book , *READING , *LIMINALITY , *CLASSIFICATION of books ,SOUTH African history - Abstract
Isabel Hofmeyr's latest book begins with stories around and about the colonial port, though the initial spotlight is on decidedly nonnarrative texts such as classification lists of cargo items, customs handbooks, and what she intriguingly calls the "book-as-form," namely diaries and registers. These, she says, "offered one unwitting model of colonial writing in which a template from the metropolis was filled with local scribblings" (12). The port is, by definition, a liminal, watery, zone, with uncertain borders between land and sea, but which often acts as the site of border policing that regulates entry into and out of the colony and nation-state. It is a powerfully evocative place around which to set Hofmeyr's ambitious and wide-ranging book, and the port's polysemous implications allow her to intervene across a series of disparate fields: climate humanities, postcolonial studies, object-oriented ontology, South African literary histories, and studies of custom and copyright. It is a masterly and original revisioning of what it means to do book history, offering a radically new method of reading. Even more importantly, it proposes a new definition of the book as object: as customs cargo, as charismatic "thing" that creates literary canonicity far from the metropole, and as an epidemiological vector of "contamination" in the mind of the colonial customs official on the alert for seditious or obscene texts, among other suggestive meanings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
98. Chinese Gazettes on the Margins of Book History: Movable Type, Wax Stereotypes, and Vernacular Techniques in Late Imperial China.
- Author
-
Mokros, Emily
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of the book , *COMMUNICATION policy , *WAXES , *STEREOTYPES , *BOOK collecting ,QING dynasty, China, 1644-1912 - Abstract
While books typically dominate in the field of print and publishing history, what happens when we redirect our attention towards ephemeral texts? Employing a widely dispersed material source base, this article focuses on Chinese gazettes: daily publications that recorded official communications and state activities at the provincial and imperial levels during the Qing dynasty (1644-1911). Gazettes, rarely studied under the auspices of book history and existing on the periphery of xylographic book publishing, offer important revelations about the geography, economics, and procedures of print and scribal publishing in late imperial China. Their producers employed a diverse range of rarely recognized techniques including movable typography, wax stereotype printing, slat printing, and other adaptations. Like other non-book ephemera, publishing practices for gazettes were determined locally in vernacular contexts, and not dictated by the imperial state. Attention to ephemeral texts brings less recognized print techniques to the fore, challenging assumptions previously formed from the perspectives of book collecting and bibliographical studies. As digitization and cataloguing efforts reveal non-book texts preserved in private, library, and archival collections, continued attention to the material record is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. Editor's Foreword.
- Author
-
Secord, Anne
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of the book , *NATURAL history - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. «On fait dire à un enfant ce qu'on veut, quand son père est absent »: Contributions parisiennes aux Relations des Jésuites en Nouvelle-France.
- Author
-
True, Micah
- Abstract
Copyright of XVIIe Siècle is the property of Presses Universitaires de France and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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