ISBN-13: 9781405192781 / Angielski / Miękka / 2009 / 624 str.
From the early Sumerian clay tablet through to the emergence of the electronic text, this Companion provides a continuous and coherent account of the history of the book.
"This companion will provide a sound point of reference for situation the book, whatever it may yet become, in its proper historical and sociological context." ( Australian Academic & Research Libraries, March 2010)
"This is a must–have volume for anyone (or any library) with an interest in the history of books and book culture." (Libraries & the Cultural Record, Winter 2009)
"This book has many uses for book historians as a reflection of the field now, in its present state." (Library Quarterly, May 2009)
"Eliot and Rose have produced a definitive survey to which specialists as well as lay readers will find themselves returning frequently for information and analytical insight." (SHARP News, Winter 2008)
"Eliot and Rose have recruited some exceptional contributors.... The round–the–world coverage also makes for an enjoyable and dippable compendium." (Times Literary Supplement, November 2008)
"The considerable learning distilled in these pages is worn lightly and the result is a volume that will appeal to experts and non–specialists alike. It will also prove to be a valuable teaching resource." (Zeitschrift fur Anglistik and Amerilanistik, October 2008)
"A Companion to the History of the Book provides a wealth of information to readers of all levels in a well laid out and written volume." (The Bonefolder, Autumn 2008)
"Academic libraries with any kind of interest in the history of the book or the history of publishing will want this ′companion′ on their shelves." (Publishing Research Quarterly, July 2008)
"As a stimulating overview of the multidimensional present state of the field, the Companion has no peer. Recommended." (CHOICE)
"An exceptional resource for anyone working in fields such as literature, history, cultural studies or media studies to name a few. Drawing on a large group of experts, Simon Eliot and Jonathan Rose have compiled a selection of essays that guide readers through many episodes in the long history of books, both inside and outside the Western tradition.... A Companion to the History of the Book is just that a companion an essential text for students and scholars from a wide variety of disciplines who are led to ask questions about the commissioning, publication, distribution and consumption of books. This book is a milestone in the history of the book for it makes the first attempt to map the field like no other book before it." (Script and Print)
"If you want to understand how cultures come into being, endure, and change, they imply, then you need to come to terms with the rich and often surprising history of the book.... Eliot and Rose have done a fine job. Their volume can be heartily recommended as the best available starting point for any historian interested in learning about this enterprise.... The Companion does not restrict itself to chronicling the development of the book itself. It also devotes attention to regimes of regulation and jurisdiction censorship, intellectual property, and the like and to systems of storage and taxonomy: libraries and bibliography." (Technology and Culture)
"This book serves as a coherent guide to the study of the history of the book. The experts bring the latest research to their work." (Umbrella Magazine)
List of Illustrations viii
Notes on Contributors x
Introduction 1
Simon Eliot and Jonathan Rose
Part I Methods and Approaches 7
1 Why Bibliography Matters 9
T. H. Howard–Hill
2 What is Textual Scholarship? 21
David Greetham
3 The Uses of Quantifi cation 33
Alexis Weedon
4 Readers: Books and Biography 50
Stephen Colclough
Part II The History of the Material Text 63
The World before the Codex 65
5 The Clay Tablet Book in Sumer, Assyria, and Babylonia 67
Eleanor Robson
6 The Papyrus Roll in Egypt, Greece, and Rome 84
Cornelia Roemer
The Book beyond the West 95
7 China 97
J. S. Edgren
8 Japan, Korea, and Vietnam 111
Peter Kornicki
9 South Asia 126
Graham Shaw
10 Latin America 138
Hortensia Calvo
11 The Hebraic Book 153
Emile G. L. Schrijver
12 The Islamic Book 165
Michael Albin
The Codex in the West 400 2000 177
13 The Triumph of the Codex: The Manuscript Book before 1100 179
Michelle P. Brown
14 Parchment and Paper: Manuscript Culture 1100 1500 194
M. T. Clanchy
15 The Gutenberg Revolutions 207
Lotte Hellinga
16 The Book Trade Comes of Age: The Sixteenth Century 220
David J. Shaw
17 The British Book Market 1600 1800 232
John Feather
18 Print and Public in Europe 1600 1800 247
Rietje van Vliet
19 North America and Transatlantic Book Culture to 1800 259
Russell L. Martin III
20 The Industrialization of the Book 1800 1970 273
Rob Banham
21 From Few and Expensive to Many and Cheap: The British Book Market 1800–1890 291
Simon Eliot
22 A Continent of Texts: Europe 1800 1890 303
Jean–Yves Mollier and Marie–Françoise Cachin
23 Building a National Literature: The United States 1800–1890 315
Robert A. Gross
24 The Globalization of the Book 1800–1970 329
David Finkelstein
25 Modernity and Print I: Britain 1890–1970 341
Jonathan Rose
26 Modernity and Print II: Europe 1890–1970 354
Adriaan van der Weel
27 Modernity and Print III: The United States 1890 1970 368
Beth Luey
28 Books and Bits: Texts and Technology 1970 2000 381
Paul Luna
29 The Global Market 1970 2000: Producers 395
Eva Hemmungs Wirten
30 The Global Market 1970 2000: Consumers 406
Claire Squires
Part III Beyond the Book 419
31 Periodicals and Periodicity 421
James Wald
32 The Importance of Ephemera 434
Martin Andrews
33 The New Textual Technologies 451
Charles Chadwyck–Healey
Part IV Issues 465
34 New Histories of Literacy 467
Patricia Crain
35 Some Non–textual Uses of Books 480
Rowan Watson
36 The Book as Art 493
Megan L. Benton
37 Obscenity, Censorship, and Modernity 508
Deana Heath
38 Copyright and the Creation of Literary Property 520
John Feather
39 Libraries and the Invention of Information 531
Wayne A. Wiegand
Coda 545
40 Does the Book Have a Future? 547
Angus Phillips
Index 560
Simon Eliot is Professor of the History of the Book in the Institute of English Studies, part of the School of Advanced Study in the University of London, and Deputy Director of the Centre for Manuscript and Print Studies. He is General Editor of the new multivolume History of Oxford University Press and editor of the journal Publishing History. His publications include Literary Cultures and the Material Book (2007) and Some Patterns and Trends in British Publishing, 1800 1919 (1994).
Jonathan Rose is Professor of History at Drew University. He was the founding president of the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing and is co–editor of the journal Book History. His publications include The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes (2001), The Holocaust and the Book: Destruction and Preservation (2001), and British Literary Publishing Houses, 1820 1965 (1991).
From the early Sumerian clay tablet through to the emergence of the electronic text, this Companion provides a continuous and coherent account of the history of the book. A team of expert contributors draws on the latest research in order to offer a cogent, transcontinental narrative. Many of them use illustrative examples and case studies of well–known texts, conveying the excitement surrounding this rapidly developing field.
The Companion to the History of the Book is organized around four distinct approaches to the history of the book. First, it introduces the variety of methods used by book historians and allied specialists, from the long–established discipline of bibliography to newer IT–based approaches. Next, it provides a broad chronological survey of the forms and content of texts. The third section situates the book in the context of text culture as a whole, while the final section addresses broader issues, such as literacy, copyright, and the future of the book.
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