Examines the late eighteenth-century preoccupation with the acquisition of old books, and the new historical discipline created by traders.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Kristian Jensen is currently Head of British Collections at the British Library. He is also the author of Incunabula and their Readers: Printing, Selling and Using Books in the Fifteenth Century (2003). He was elected Lyell Reader at the University of Oxford for 2008, and this book is based on his Lyell Lectures.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. Enlightenment ideas and revolutionary practice: incunabula and freedom 2. Aristocratic aspirations and the war-time market: competing for the past and the future 3. An object-based discipline emerges: old books, new luxury 4. Competing for authority. 'The insolence of English wealth' 5. Commemorating and obliterating the past: 'old books, very displeasing to the eye' 6. Conclusion.
Introduction 1. Enlightenment ideas and revolutionary practice: incunabula and freedom 2. Aristocratic aspirations and the war-time market: competing for the past and the future 3. An object-based discipline emerges: old books, new luxury 4. Competing for authority. 'The insolence of English wealth' 5. Commemorating and obliterating the past: 'old books, very displeasing to the eye' 6. Conclusion.
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