The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, Volumen4Richard Gameson, Formerly Professor of Bibliography and Textual Criticism D F McKenzie, Nigel J. Morgan, D. F. McKenzie, Lotte Hellinga, John Barnard, Rodney M. Thomson, Joseph Burney Trapp, Maureen Bell, David McKitterick, Ian R. Willison, Michael F. Suarez, Andrew Nash, Michael L. Turner, Claire Squires Cambridge University Press, 1998 - 920 páginas "The history of the book offers a distinctive form of access to the ways in which human beings have sought to give meaning to their own and others' lives. Our knowledge of the past derives mainly from texts. Landscape, architecture, sculpture, painting and the decorative arts have their stories to tell and may themselves be construed as texts; but oral tradition, manuscripts, printed books, and those other forms of inscription and incision such as maps, music and graphic images have a power to report even more directly on human experience and the events and thoughts which shaped it. The seven volumes of the History of the Book in Britain will help explain how these texts were created, why they took the forms they did, their relations with other media, and what influence they had on the minds and actions of those who heard, read or viewed them. Its range, too - in time, place and the great diversity of the conditions of text production, including reception - challenges any attempt to define its limits and give an account adequate to its complexity. It addresses, whether by period, country, genre or technology, widely disparate fields of enquiry, each of which demands and attracts its own forms of scholarship. The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain seeks to represent much of that variety. The volumes investigate the creation, material production, dissemination and reception of texts, effectively plotting the intellectual history of Britain."-- Publisher description. |
Comentarios de la gente - Escribir un comentario
No encontramos ningún comentario en los lugares habituales.
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
Religious publishing in England 15571640 | 29 |
Religious publishing in England 16401695 | 67 |
ORAL TRADITIONS AND SCRIBAL CULTURE | 95 |
John Donne and the circulation of manuscripts | 122 |
Patronage and the printing of learned works for the author | 174 |
University printing at Oxford and Cambridge | 189 |
classical and historical scholarship | 206 |
household husbandry behaviour | 514 |
The creation of the periodical press 16201695 | 533 |
constraints on | 553 |
The economic context | 568 |
French paper in English books | 583 |
Bookbinding | 620 |
Miseenpage illustration expressive form | 632 |
The typography of Hobbess Leviathan | 645 |
The literature of travel | 246 |
Science and the book | 274 |
Samuel Hartlib and the commonwealth of learning | 304 |
private and public libraries | 323 |
Monastic collections and their dispersal | 339 |
Literature the playhouse and the public | 351 |
Milton | 376 |
Nonconformist voices and books | 410 |
NIGEL SMITH | 431 |
The Bible trade | 455 |
English law books and legal publishing | 474 |
ABCs almanacs ballads chapbooks popular piety | 504 |
Popish Plot narratives 16781680 | 652 |
PRODUCTION | 663 |
Scotland | 687 |
the Continent | 735 |
the American colonies | 744 |
THE LATE | 753 |
STATISTICAL APPENDICES | 779 |
Figure A1 Annual totals 14751700 | 785 |
Survey of printing presses 1668 | 794 |
Abbreviations | 803 |
857 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain:, Volumen4;Volúmenes1557-1695 John Barnard,D. F. McKenzie Sin vista previa disponible - 2014 |
The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain:, Volumen4;Volúmenes1557-1695 John Barnard,D. F. McKenzie Sin vista previa disponible - 2014 |
The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain:, Volumen4;Volúmenes1557-1695 John Barnard,D. F. McKenzie Sin vista previa disponible - 2014 |
Términos y frases comunes
appeared authors became Bible book trade booksellers British Cambridge catalogue Catholic Church claimed collection common Company continued copies court culture death earlier early edition Elizabethan England English established evidence example folio followed French further hand Henry important increase interest Ireland issues Italy James John kind knowledge known late later Latin learned least less letters London Lord manuscript maps material means natural noted original Oxford particular perhaps period plays poems political practice present printed printers probably production Protestant publication published Quaker readers reading records religious remained reports Restoration Richard Robert royal seventeenth century Society sold Stationers Stock success suggests texts Thomas titles trade translation University volume Welsh women writing written