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The Concept of the Book: The Production, Progression and Dissemination of Information

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If we push the definition of a ‘book’ beyond the traditional form of the codex to encompass cuneiform tablets, papyri, as well as the printed and digital book- just what is the essence of its purpo...
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  • 28 January 2019
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This collection sets out to define the ways in which ‘books and letters, telephone messages and tweets, tie a culture together and help define it by the communication networks it generates and sustains’; which it achieves admirably. It is a series of connected essays, which represent a fresh understanding of the field of book history. It also provides a rich discussion of a variety of case studies, beautifully illustrated with images of cuneiform stones, Second World War propaganda, mediaeval and fifteenth-century manuscripts (including a wonderful illustration of an elephant), and seventeenth-century images of witches, complete with accompanying cats.

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Price: £26.99
Publisher: University of London
Imprint: University of London Press
Publication Date: 28 January 2019
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780992725747
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

LITERARY CRITICISM / Books & Reading, Biography, Literature and Literary studies, DESIGN / Book, ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES / Books, Publishing and book trade, Manuscripts and illumination

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Introduction Cynthia Johnston
1. Recasting book history Simon Eliot
2. Information flows in rural Babylonia c. 1500 BCE Eleanor Robson
3. The circulation of history books in twelfth-century Normandy Laura Cleaver
4. Some medieval readers of Aristotle Pamela Robinson
5. The encyclopedia and the codex: pages, margins and entries Katharine Schopflin
6. The Wonderful Discoveries: English witchcraft and early Stuart pamphlet culture Jessica Starr
7. ‘Propaganda bestsellers’: British Official War Books, 1941–6 Henry Irving