The Oxford Handbook of the History of the Book in Early Modern England
Herausgeber: Smyth, Adam
The Oxford Handbook of the History of the Book in Early Modern England
Herausgeber: Smyth, Adam
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
The Oxford Handbook of the History of the Book in Early Modern England provides a rich, imaginative and also accessible guide to the latest research in one of the most exciting areas of early modern studies.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Simon WinchesterThe Professor and the Madman21,99 €
- Cathy ShrankThe Oxford Handbook of Thomas More's Utopia207,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of Modern Irish Poetry219,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of Andrew Marvell252,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of Modern Irish Fiction217,99 €
- The Oxford History of the Novel in English160,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of John Bunyan225,99 €
-
-
-
The Oxford Handbook of the History of the Book in Early Modern England provides a rich, imaginative and also accessible guide to the latest research in one of the most exciting areas of early modern studies.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 768
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 177mm x 48mm
- Gewicht: 1676g
- ISBN-13: 9780198846239
- ISBN-10: 0198846231
- Artikelnr.: 67733027
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 768
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 251mm x 177mm x 48mm
- Gewicht: 1676g
- ISBN-13: 9780198846239
- ISBN-10: 0198846231
- Artikelnr.: 67733027
Adam Smyth is Professor of English Literature and the History of the Book at Balliol College, Oxford. He works on the connections between literature and material texts, particularly in the 16th and 17th centuries. He is the author of four books, including Material Texts in Early Modern England (2019), and the editor and co-editor of four collections of essays (including Book Parts (2019) with Dennis Duncan). He writes regularly for the London Review of Books.
* 1: Adam Smyth: An Introduction: Thinking about the history of the
book
* 2: Claire M.L. Bourne: The Handmaids' Tale: Book History,
Shakespeare, and Women's Textual Labour
* 3: Megan Heffernan: Cataloguing the Past: Periodisation and the
Historiography of Print
* 4: Jeffrey Todd Knight: The Scale of Book History: Data, Distance,
Description
* 5: Brandi K. Adams: 'Inlaid with inkie spots of jet': Early modern
book history and premodern critical race studies
* 6: Brian Cummings: Religion and the history of the book
* 7: Alexandra Franklin and Richard Lawrence: Printing and book
history: Insights from practice
* 8: Jason Scott-Warren: Monuments and trifles: which books do we use
to tell the history of the book?
* 9: Paul Nash: What was a print shop, and what happened there?
* 10: Tamara Atkin: Scribes, Compositors, Correctors
* 11: Stephen B. Dobranski: Authors
* 12: Kirk Melnikoff: Publishing Virginia (1608-15): Specialization,
Commissioning, Networks
* 13: Rachel Stenner: Regional book and print trades
* 14: Katherine Hunt: Representing the labour of printing in image and
text
* 15: Jason Peacey: Printing and the Universities
* 16: Michael Hunter: Illustrated books
* 17: James Misson: Typography
* 18: Harriet Philips: Beyond the book: non-codex texts
* 19: Adrian Johns: Science and the book in early modern England
* 20: Anna Reynolds: Waste, offcuts, remains, reuse
* 21: Ben Higgins: 'The Book-sellars Shop': Browsing, Reading, and
Buying in Early Modern England
* 22: Hanna de Lange and Andrew Pettegree: Internationalism and the
English book trade
* 23: Tara L. Lyons: 'A Gifte of good Moment': A New History of the
Stationers' Benevolence to the Bodleian Library, 1610 to 1616
* 24: A.E.B. Coldiron: Multi-lingual print
* 25: Michelle O'Callaghan: Contexts for Circulation: Households,
University, Inns of Court, and Professional Circles
* 26: H.R. Woudhuysen: From Duck Lane to Lazarus Seaman: Buying and
Selling Old Books in England during the Sixteenth and Seventeenth
Centuries
* 27: Sujata Iyengar: Conversations about Time and Space: Early Modern
Books and Contemporary Artists' Books
* 28: Jeff Dolven: The Early Modern Book as Metaphor
* 29: Caroline Duroselle-Melish: Past, Present, and Future: Early
Modern Collections and the Work of a Curator
* 30: Emma Smith: Self-reading books: marginalia, prosopopoeia and book
history
* 31: Georgina Wilson: Book modification
* 32: Bruce R. Smith: Early Modern Books and Phonography
* 33: Alexandra Hill: Transience and loss
book
* 2: Claire M.L. Bourne: The Handmaids' Tale: Book History,
Shakespeare, and Women's Textual Labour
* 3: Megan Heffernan: Cataloguing the Past: Periodisation and the
Historiography of Print
* 4: Jeffrey Todd Knight: The Scale of Book History: Data, Distance,
Description
* 5: Brandi K. Adams: 'Inlaid with inkie spots of jet': Early modern
book history and premodern critical race studies
* 6: Brian Cummings: Religion and the history of the book
* 7: Alexandra Franklin and Richard Lawrence: Printing and book
history: Insights from practice
* 8: Jason Scott-Warren: Monuments and trifles: which books do we use
to tell the history of the book?
* 9: Paul Nash: What was a print shop, and what happened there?
* 10: Tamara Atkin: Scribes, Compositors, Correctors
* 11: Stephen B. Dobranski: Authors
* 12: Kirk Melnikoff: Publishing Virginia (1608-15): Specialization,
Commissioning, Networks
* 13: Rachel Stenner: Regional book and print trades
* 14: Katherine Hunt: Representing the labour of printing in image and
text
* 15: Jason Peacey: Printing and the Universities
* 16: Michael Hunter: Illustrated books
* 17: James Misson: Typography
* 18: Harriet Philips: Beyond the book: non-codex texts
* 19: Adrian Johns: Science and the book in early modern England
* 20: Anna Reynolds: Waste, offcuts, remains, reuse
* 21: Ben Higgins: 'The Book-sellars Shop': Browsing, Reading, and
Buying in Early Modern England
* 22: Hanna de Lange and Andrew Pettegree: Internationalism and the
English book trade
* 23: Tara L. Lyons: 'A Gifte of good Moment': A New History of the
Stationers' Benevolence to the Bodleian Library, 1610 to 1616
* 24: A.E.B. Coldiron: Multi-lingual print
* 25: Michelle O'Callaghan: Contexts for Circulation: Households,
University, Inns of Court, and Professional Circles
* 26: H.R. Woudhuysen: From Duck Lane to Lazarus Seaman: Buying and
Selling Old Books in England during the Sixteenth and Seventeenth
Centuries
* 27: Sujata Iyengar: Conversations about Time and Space: Early Modern
Books and Contemporary Artists' Books
* 28: Jeff Dolven: The Early Modern Book as Metaphor
* 29: Caroline Duroselle-Melish: Past, Present, and Future: Early
Modern Collections and the Work of a Curator
* 30: Emma Smith: Self-reading books: marginalia, prosopopoeia and book
history
* 31: Georgina Wilson: Book modification
* 32: Bruce R. Smith: Early Modern Books and Phonography
* 33: Alexandra Hill: Transience and loss
* 1: Adam Smyth: An Introduction: Thinking about the history of the
book
* 2: Claire M.L. Bourne: The Handmaids' Tale: Book History,
Shakespeare, and Women's Textual Labour
* 3: Megan Heffernan: Cataloguing the Past: Periodisation and the
Historiography of Print
* 4: Jeffrey Todd Knight: The Scale of Book History: Data, Distance,
Description
* 5: Brandi K. Adams: 'Inlaid with inkie spots of jet': Early modern
book history and premodern critical race studies
* 6: Brian Cummings: Religion and the history of the book
* 7: Alexandra Franklin and Richard Lawrence: Printing and book
history: Insights from practice
* 8: Jason Scott-Warren: Monuments and trifles: which books do we use
to tell the history of the book?
* 9: Paul Nash: What was a print shop, and what happened there?
* 10: Tamara Atkin: Scribes, Compositors, Correctors
* 11: Stephen B. Dobranski: Authors
* 12: Kirk Melnikoff: Publishing Virginia (1608-15): Specialization,
Commissioning, Networks
* 13: Rachel Stenner: Regional book and print trades
* 14: Katherine Hunt: Representing the labour of printing in image and
text
* 15: Jason Peacey: Printing and the Universities
* 16: Michael Hunter: Illustrated books
* 17: James Misson: Typography
* 18: Harriet Philips: Beyond the book: non-codex texts
* 19: Adrian Johns: Science and the book in early modern England
* 20: Anna Reynolds: Waste, offcuts, remains, reuse
* 21: Ben Higgins: 'The Book-sellars Shop': Browsing, Reading, and
Buying in Early Modern England
* 22: Hanna de Lange and Andrew Pettegree: Internationalism and the
English book trade
* 23: Tara L. Lyons: 'A Gifte of good Moment': A New History of the
Stationers' Benevolence to the Bodleian Library, 1610 to 1616
* 24: A.E.B. Coldiron: Multi-lingual print
* 25: Michelle O'Callaghan: Contexts for Circulation: Households,
University, Inns of Court, and Professional Circles
* 26: H.R. Woudhuysen: From Duck Lane to Lazarus Seaman: Buying and
Selling Old Books in England during the Sixteenth and Seventeenth
Centuries
* 27: Sujata Iyengar: Conversations about Time and Space: Early Modern
Books and Contemporary Artists' Books
* 28: Jeff Dolven: The Early Modern Book as Metaphor
* 29: Caroline Duroselle-Melish: Past, Present, and Future: Early
Modern Collections and the Work of a Curator
* 30: Emma Smith: Self-reading books: marginalia, prosopopoeia and book
history
* 31: Georgina Wilson: Book modification
* 32: Bruce R. Smith: Early Modern Books and Phonography
* 33: Alexandra Hill: Transience and loss
book
* 2: Claire M.L. Bourne: The Handmaids' Tale: Book History,
Shakespeare, and Women's Textual Labour
* 3: Megan Heffernan: Cataloguing the Past: Periodisation and the
Historiography of Print
* 4: Jeffrey Todd Knight: The Scale of Book History: Data, Distance,
Description
* 5: Brandi K. Adams: 'Inlaid with inkie spots of jet': Early modern
book history and premodern critical race studies
* 6: Brian Cummings: Religion and the history of the book
* 7: Alexandra Franklin and Richard Lawrence: Printing and book
history: Insights from practice
* 8: Jason Scott-Warren: Monuments and trifles: which books do we use
to tell the history of the book?
* 9: Paul Nash: What was a print shop, and what happened there?
* 10: Tamara Atkin: Scribes, Compositors, Correctors
* 11: Stephen B. Dobranski: Authors
* 12: Kirk Melnikoff: Publishing Virginia (1608-15): Specialization,
Commissioning, Networks
* 13: Rachel Stenner: Regional book and print trades
* 14: Katherine Hunt: Representing the labour of printing in image and
text
* 15: Jason Peacey: Printing and the Universities
* 16: Michael Hunter: Illustrated books
* 17: James Misson: Typography
* 18: Harriet Philips: Beyond the book: non-codex texts
* 19: Adrian Johns: Science and the book in early modern England
* 20: Anna Reynolds: Waste, offcuts, remains, reuse
* 21: Ben Higgins: 'The Book-sellars Shop': Browsing, Reading, and
Buying in Early Modern England
* 22: Hanna de Lange and Andrew Pettegree: Internationalism and the
English book trade
* 23: Tara L. Lyons: 'A Gifte of good Moment': A New History of the
Stationers' Benevolence to the Bodleian Library, 1610 to 1616
* 24: A.E.B. Coldiron: Multi-lingual print
* 25: Michelle O'Callaghan: Contexts for Circulation: Households,
University, Inns of Court, and Professional Circles
* 26: H.R. Woudhuysen: From Duck Lane to Lazarus Seaman: Buying and
Selling Old Books in England during the Sixteenth and Seventeenth
Centuries
* 27: Sujata Iyengar: Conversations about Time and Space: Early Modern
Books and Contemporary Artists' Books
* 28: Jeff Dolven: The Early Modern Book as Metaphor
* 29: Caroline Duroselle-Melish: Past, Present, and Future: Early
Modern Collections and the Work of a Curator
* 30: Emma Smith: Self-reading books: marginalia, prosopopoeia and book
history
* 31: Georgina Wilson: Book modification
* 32: Bruce R. Smith: Early Modern Books and Phonography
* 33: Alexandra Hill: Transience and loss