What is the History of the Book?

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What is the History of the Book?

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ISBN: 9780745641621
author: James Raven
publishing house: Polity Press
publication date: 2017
series: What is History? Series
binding: Paperback
price: GBP 14.99
number of pages: 196

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James Raven   

overview

This book introduces the fast-developing field of book history. James Raven, a leading historian of the book, offers a fresh and accessible guide to the global study of the production, dissemination and reception of written and printed texts across all societies and in all ages.
Students, teachers, researchers and general readers will benefit from the book's investigation of the subject's origins, scope and future direction. Based on original shows research and a wide range of sources, What is the History of the Book? how book history crosses disciplinary boundaries and intersects with literary, historical, communications, media, library and conservation studies. Raven uses examples from around the world to explore different traditions in bibliography, palaeography and manuscript studies. He analyses book history's growing global ambition and demonstrates how the study of reading practises opens up new horizons in social history and the history of knowledge. He shows how book history is contributing to debates about intellectual and popular culture, colonialism and the communication of ideas.
The first global, accessible introduction to the field of book history from ancient to modern times, What is is the History of the Book? essential reading for all those interested in one of society's most important cultural artefacts.

contents

Preface
Acknowledgements
List of illustrations and tables
1. The Scope of Book History
Redefining the book
First books first
2. The Early History of Book History
Pre-histories of the book
Towards bibliography
3. Description, Enumeration and Modelling
Retrospective catalogues and bibliometrics
New perspectives and projects
Circuits and diagrams
4. Who, What and How?
Economics
Wider horizons
Control: Copyright, censorship and circulation
Libraries
Cautions and precepts
5. Reading
Identifying readers
Recovering reading practises
Consequences
Further reading
Index

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