Oxford History of Popular Print Culture
Volume One: Cheap Print in Britain and Ireland to 1660
Herausgeber: Raymond, Joad
Oxford History of Popular Print Culture
Volume One: Cheap Print in Britain and Ireland to 1660
Herausgeber: Raymond, Joad
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
From the early sixteenth century through to the later seventeenth, governments, institutions, and individuals learned to use cheaply-produced printed texts to inform, entertain, and persuade. This authoritative collection of essays examines the developing role of popular printed texts in the first two centuries of print in Britain and Ireland.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Women's Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain, 1690-1820s272,99 €
- Andrew Sanders (Andrew Sanders is Professor of English at the UniveThe Short Oxford History of English Literature46,99 €
- Kenneth O. MorganThe Oxford Illustrated History of Britain27,99 €
- Christopher Ricks (ed.)The Oxford Book of English Verse45,99 €
- T. Robin Chapman (Department of Welsh Senior lecturer and Celtic SThe Oxford Literary History of Wales171,99 €
- David Chandler / Ian Beckett (eds.)The Oxford History of the British Army24,99 €
- Sebastiaan Verweij (Lecturer in Late Medieval and Early Modern EnglLiterary Culture of Early Modern Scotland147,99 €
-
-
-
From the early sixteenth century through to the later seventeenth, governments, institutions, and individuals learned to use cheaply-produced printed texts to inform, entertain, and persuade. This authoritative collection of essays examines the developing role of popular printed texts in the first two centuries of print in Britain and Ireland.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- The Oxford History of Popular Print Culture
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 704
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. Juni 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 254mm x 172mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 1420g
- ISBN-13: 9780199287048
- ISBN-10: 019928704X
- Artikelnr.: 32728057
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- The Oxford History of Popular Print Culture
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 704
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. Juni 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 254mm x 172mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 1420g
- ISBN-13: 9780199287048
- ISBN-10: 019928704X
- Artikelnr.: 32728057
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Joad Raymond is Professor of English Literature at the University of East Anglia. His work explores early newspapers, politics, religion, and literary history, and the connections between these. Previous books include The Invention of the Newspaper (OUP, 1996), Pamphlets and Pamphleteering in Early Modern Britain (CUP, 2003), Milton's Angels: The Early Modern Imagination (OUP, 2010) and various essays and edited books. He is presently editing Milton's Latin Defences for The Oxford Complete Works of John Milton, and also working on a project investigating early-modern international news networks.
Preface
List of Tables
List of Illustrations
Notes on Conventions
Notes on Contributors
Chronology
1: Joad Raymond: Introduction: the origins of popular print culture
Part one: Historical Contexts
2: Mike Braddick: England and Wales
3: Hamish Mathison: Scotland
4: Jane Ohlmeyer: Ireland
5: Tim Harris: Popular, Plebeian, Culture: Historical Definitions
6: Joad Raymond: The Development of the Book Trade in Britain
7: Anna Bayman: Printing, Learning and the Unlearned
8: Heidi Hackel: Popular Literacy and Society
9: Stephen Dobranski: Reading Strategies
10: Julie Crawford: Oral Culture and Popular Print
11: Andrew McRae: Manuscript Culture and Popular Print
12: Alastair Bellany: Libel
13: William H. Sherman: The Social Life of Books
Part two: Some International Comparisons
14: Roger Chartier: France and Spain
15: Ottavia Niccoli: Italy
16: Margit Thøfner: The Netherlands
17: Alisha Rankin: Germany
Part three: Themes
18: Peter Lake: Religion and Cheap Print
19: David Colclough: Rhetoric
20: Markku Peltonen: Political Argument
21: Helen Pierce: Images, Representation, and Counter-Representation
22: Sara Mendelson: Women and Print
23: Mark Jenner: London
24: Thomas Cogswell: Parliament and the Press
25: Nicole Greenspan: War
Part four: Forms and Genres
26: Angela McShane: Ballads and Broadsides
27: Lori Newcomb: Romance
28: Joad Raymond: News
29: Simon Schaffer: Science
30: Mary Fissell: Popular Medical Writing
31: Lauren Kassell: Almanacs and Prognostications
32: Peter Burke: Popular History
33: Jason Peacey: Pamphlets
34: Lori Newcomb: Chapbooks
35: Mary Morrissey: Sermons, Primers, and Prayer Books
36: Natasha Glaisyer: Popular Didactic Literature
37: Zachary Lesser: Playbooks
Part five: Case Studies
38: Tracey Sowerby: 1535
39: Cathy Shrank: 1553
40: Jesse Lander: 1588-9
41: Matthew Woodcock: 1603
42: Thomas Cogswell: 1625
43: Jason McElligott: 1641
44: Martin Dzelzainis: 1649
45: Gerald MacLean: 1660
Bibliography
List of Tables
List of Illustrations
Notes on Conventions
Notes on Contributors
Chronology
1: Joad Raymond: Introduction: the origins of popular print culture
Part one: Historical Contexts
2: Mike Braddick: England and Wales
3: Hamish Mathison: Scotland
4: Jane Ohlmeyer: Ireland
5: Tim Harris: Popular, Plebeian, Culture: Historical Definitions
6: Joad Raymond: The Development of the Book Trade in Britain
7: Anna Bayman: Printing, Learning and the Unlearned
8: Heidi Hackel: Popular Literacy and Society
9: Stephen Dobranski: Reading Strategies
10: Julie Crawford: Oral Culture and Popular Print
11: Andrew McRae: Manuscript Culture and Popular Print
12: Alastair Bellany: Libel
13: William H. Sherman: The Social Life of Books
Part two: Some International Comparisons
14: Roger Chartier: France and Spain
15: Ottavia Niccoli: Italy
16: Margit Thøfner: The Netherlands
17: Alisha Rankin: Germany
Part three: Themes
18: Peter Lake: Religion and Cheap Print
19: David Colclough: Rhetoric
20: Markku Peltonen: Political Argument
21: Helen Pierce: Images, Representation, and Counter-Representation
22: Sara Mendelson: Women and Print
23: Mark Jenner: London
24: Thomas Cogswell: Parliament and the Press
25: Nicole Greenspan: War
Part four: Forms and Genres
26: Angela McShane: Ballads and Broadsides
27: Lori Newcomb: Romance
28: Joad Raymond: News
29: Simon Schaffer: Science
30: Mary Fissell: Popular Medical Writing
31: Lauren Kassell: Almanacs and Prognostications
32: Peter Burke: Popular History
33: Jason Peacey: Pamphlets
34: Lori Newcomb: Chapbooks
35: Mary Morrissey: Sermons, Primers, and Prayer Books
36: Natasha Glaisyer: Popular Didactic Literature
37: Zachary Lesser: Playbooks
Part five: Case Studies
38: Tracey Sowerby: 1535
39: Cathy Shrank: 1553
40: Jesse Lander: 1588-9
41: Matthew Woodcock: 1603
42: Thomas Cogswell: 1625
43: Jason McElligott: 1641
44: Martin Dzelzainis: 1649
45: Gerald MacLean: 1660
Bibliography
Preface
List of Tables
List of Illustrations
Notes on Conventions
Notes on Contributors
Chronology
1: Joad Raymond: Introduction: the origins of popular print culture
Part one: Historical Contexts
2: Mike Braddick: England and Wales
3: Hamish Mathison: Scotland
4: Jane Ohlmeyer: Ireland
5: Tim Harris: Popular, Plebeian, Culture: Historical Definitions
6: Joad Raymond: The Development of the Book Trade in Britain
7: Anna Bayman: Printing, Learning and the Unlearned
8: Heidi Hackel: Popular Literacy and Society
9: Stephen Dobranski: Reading Strategies
10: Julie Crawford: Oral Culture and Popular Print
11: Andrew McRae: Manuscript Culture and Popular Print
12: Alastair Bellany: Libel
13: William H. Sherman: The Social Life of Books
Part two: Some International Comparisons
14: Roger Chartier: France and Spain
15: Ottavia Niccoli: Italy
16: Margit Thøfner: The Netherlands
17: Alisha Rankin: Germany
Part three: Themes
18: Peter Lake: Religion and Cheap Print
19: David Colclough: Rhetoric
20: Markku Peltonen: Political Argument
21: Helen Pierce: Images, Representation, and Counter-Representation
22: Sara Mendelson: Women and Print
23: Mark Jenner: London
24: Thomas Cogswell: Parliament and the Press
25: Nicole Greenspan: War
Part four: Forms and Genres
26: Angela McShane: Ballads and Broadsides
27: Lori Newcomb: Romance
28: Joad Raymond: News
29: Simon Schaffer: Science
30: Mary Fissell: Popular Medical Writing
31: Lauren Kassell: Almanacs and Prognostications
32: Peter Burke: Popular History
33: Jason Peacey: Pamphlets
34: Lori Newcomb: Chapbooks
35: Mary Morrissey: Sermons, Primers, and Prayer Books
36: Natasha Glaisyer: Popular Didactic Literature
37: Zachary Lesser: Playbooks
Part five: Case Studies
38: Tracey Sowerby: 1535
39: Cathy Shrank: 1553
40: Jesse Lander: 1588-9
41: Matthew Woodcock: 1603
42: Thomas Cogswell: 1625
43: Jason McElligott: 1641
44: Martin Dzelzainis: 1649
45: Gerald MacLean: 1660
Bibliography
List of Tables
List of Illustrations
Notes on Conventions
Notes on Contributors
Chronology
1: Joad Raymond: Introduction: the origins of popular print culture
Part one: Historical Contexts
2: Mike Braddick: England and Wales
3: Hamish Mathison: Scotland
4: Jane Ohlmeyer: Ireland
5: Tim Harris: Popular, Plebeian, Culture: Historical Definitions
6: Joad Raymond: The Development of the Book Trade in Britain
7: Anna Bayman: Printing, Learning and the Unlearned
8: Heidi Hackel: Popular Literacy and Society
9: Stephen Dobranski: Reading Strategies
10: Julie Crawford: Oral Culture and Popular Print
11: Andrew McRae: Manuscript Culture and Popular Print
12: Alastair Bellany: Libel
13: William H. Sherman: The Social Life of Books
Part two: Some International Comparisons
14: Roger Chartier: France and Spain
15: Ottavia Niccoli: Italy
16: Margit Thøfner: The Netherlands
17: Alisha Rankin: Germany
Part three: Themes
18: Peter Lake: Religion and Cheap Print
19: David Colclough: Rhetoric
20: Markku Peltonen: Political Argument
21: Helen Pierce: Images, Representation, and Counter-Representation
22: Sara Mendelson: Women and Print
23: Mark Jenner: London
24: Thomas Cogswell: Parliament and the Press
25: Nicole Greenspan: War
Part four: Forms and Genres
26: Angela McShane: Ballads and Broadsides
27: Lori Newcomb: Romance
28: Joad Raymond: News
29: Simon Schaffer: Science
30: Mary Fissell: Popular Medical Writing
31: Lauren Kassell: Almanacs and Prognostications
32: Peter Burke: Popular History
33: Jason Peacey: Pamphlets
34: Lori Newcomb: Chapbooks
35: Mary Morrissey: Sermons, Primers, and Prayer Books
36: Natasha Glaisyer: Popular Didactic Literature
37: Zachary Lesser: Playbooks
Part five: Case Studies
38: Tracey Sowerby: 1535
39: Cathy Shrank: 1553
40: Jesse Lander: 1588-9
41: Matthew Woodcock: 1603
42: Thomas Cogswell: 1625
43: Jason McElligott: 1641
44: Martin Dzelzainis: 1649
45: Gerald MacLean: 1660
Bibliography