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
James Raven is Professor of Modern History at the University of Essex and a Fellow of Magdalene College, University of Cambridge.
"This is an invaluable survey of the origins, theoretical and
methodological underpinnings, and major resources and findings of
the fast-growing field of book history, across a global range of
times and places."
—Ann Blair, Harvard University "James Raven's boundary-defying book
is delightfully adventuresome in its thinking and dazzling in the
scope and command of the sources it adduces. This remarkably
accomplished little volume will be part of the conversation for
years to come."
—Michael F. Suarez, S.J., Director, Rare Book School at the
University of Virginia "It's exactly what I need to introduce me to
what the discipline embraces, how it began and how it is
developing."
—Karen McAulay, Times Higher Education Supplement "'Easy writing',
wrote the playwright Sheridan, 'is damned hard reading'. For James
Raven this must have been damned hard writing indeed, for the
result is reading which lightly carries a lifetime of learning and
will surely act as an inspiration to others, not least to young
scholars who are coming new to the field."
—Library & Information History
Ask a Question About this Product More... |