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eighteenth-century reading habits

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Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2020) 50 (1): 139–159.
Published: 01 January 2020
... in Early Modern England (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005). 88 Woolf, Common Reader, 40. 89 Woolf, 40. Philip Sidney’s The Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia cultural reception book publishing eighteenth-century reading habits Copyright © 2020 by Duke University Press 2020 ...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2013) 43 (3): 623–653.
Published: 01 September 2013
... volume and discourse on globalism. In the eighteenth century, that globalism underwrote the vogue of urban pleasures enjoyed on France’s tables. © 2013 by Duke University Press 2013 a Exotic Edibles: Coffee, Tea...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2008) 38 (3): 467–491.
Published: 01 September 2008
...José Pardo-Tomás; Àlvar Martínez-Vidal Consultation by mail had been common in medical practice more or less since the time of its consolidation in Europe in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, but this mode of communication vastly expanded in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2020) 50 (1): 161–180.
Published: 01 January 2020
... modes of reading that sample the source to produce a statistical artifact from which we can in turn read clusterings of words, shifts in topic or register, or changing orthographic habits. These remote reading practices, however, fail to capitalize on valuable modeling of the individual text, but more...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2016) 46 (3): 513–543.
Published: 01 September 2016
...-­ and early sixteenth-­century readers, one would never know from reading Gregory that à Kempis not only remained a best-­selling religious author throughout the seventeenth century, but actually grew in popularity in the eighteenth century, his book reissued continually under a bewildering variety...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2017) 47 (1): 53–73.
Published: 01 January 2017
... but fleet- ing, diffuse and hard to gather. Microhistory’s habits of close reading might be precious here; I know few published models.26 Suchness 4: The new spatial turn I am often struck by how, these days, “space” and “place” seem to have switched chairs. Space, in the old days a few decades...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2009) 39 (1): 183–200.
Published: 01 January 2009
... for coffee moved Wolfgang Schivelbusch to attribute chocolate’s lower popularity to religious ideological difference. He writes that chocolate appeared in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as coffee’s opposite. The latter . . . was markedly anti-corporeal and anti-erotic...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2015) 45 (3): 543–556.
Published: 01 September 2015
..., with a comb decoration, is particularly German in character. Brown / Cutting, Sticking, and Material Meaning  551 She also noted that the binding almost certainly dates from the eighteenth century, because the plates have been pasted into a blank book, and tape has been...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2008) 38 (2): 345–371.
Published: 01 May 2008
... to every turn which is required to represent a figure answerable to the rules of drawing.”16 Seventeenth- and eighteenth-century writers were accustomed to Fournier’s “ciphers,” “forms,” and “figures”; and they projected the habits and assumptions of their own print world back onto those...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2008) 38 (3): 443–465.
Published: 01 September 2008
... climate, geography, and peoples is Clarence J. Glacken, Traces on the Rhodian Shore: Nature and Culture in Western Thought from Ancient Times to the End of the Eighteenth Century (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967). 7 Fynes Moryson, An itinerary containing his ten yeeres...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2015) 45 (2): 395–418.
Published: 01 May 2015
... Press, 2003), 561 – 62; and Virtue, Commerce, and History: Essays on Political Thought and History, Chiefly in the Eighteenth Century (Cambridge: Cambridge Uni- versity Press, 1985), 37 – 50. 21 In “The Paradoxes of Political Liberty,” Skinner enters the debate between proponents...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2017) 47 (3): 561–586.
Published: 01 September 2017
...” to the eighteenthcentury urban missions —  the two missions remained interdependent.52 But a tutor like Marwood could not remain in the household forever. He had to be sure that the books he left behind were useful. Dawnay, again, explained what would not be use- ful: the plain scriptures...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2017) 47 (3): 487–516.
Published: 01 September 2017
... to methods of reading, and to the ways in which reading habits develop in relation to the biblically inflected literature of the Genevan exiles. Rather than thinking of the defining mode for Protestant reading as literalism, a term promulgated by the reformers themselves, I propose that we find...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2011) 41 (1): 67–92.
Published: 01 January 2011
... of eighteenth- century Europe, the Weimar of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. In the opening chapter of his autobiography Dichtung und Wahrheit, which first appeared in 1811, Goethe fondly recalls the start of his love affair with literature. Among the few titles he remembers after a lifetime of reading...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2009) 39 (3): 459–481.
Published: 01 September 2009
... of the Northeast (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1980); Irena Turnau, “The Organization of the European Textile Industry from the Thirteenth to the Eighteenth Century,” Journal of European Economic History 17 (1988): 583 – 602. 3 On the consumption of goods across the social spectrum...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2008) 38 (3): 413–442.
Published: 01 September 2008
... thousand years ago, might solve their suffering here and now. Yet they wouldn't dream of seeking succor in the works of Galen. Why? How have the beliefs and practices that guided Western medicine up through the eighteenth century come to seem, paradoxically, more alien and distant than ancient Chinese...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2007) 37 (3): 595–620.
Published: 01 September 2007
... obscured before it was appropriated as the major influence on “Renaissance” thought.23 Bernal regards the “Aryan Model” of Greek civilization as an eighteenth- to nineteenth-century prod- uct, but the process of its formation began in the early modern period.24 The marginalization of Arab and Jewish...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2013) 43 (1): 99–120.
Published: 01 January 2013
... Inquisition has provided critical stimulus for awakening these debates; see “Jewish Conversion, the Spanish Pure Blood Laws and Reformation: A Revisionist View of Race and Religious Antisemitism,” Sixteenth Century Journal 18, no. 1 (1987): 3 – 30. 35 My reading agrees with, and builds...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2023) 53 (1): 149–178.
Published: 01 January 2023
... in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, see Martina Mampieri, “From Menasseh ben Israel to Solomon Proops: Amsterdam Jewish Druckwesen in the Library of Isaiah Sonne,” Studia Rosenthaliana 46, no. 1–2 (2020): 97–116, at 103–4. 14 James Crossley, ed., The Diary and Correspondence of Dr. John...
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Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2023) 53 (3): 545–571.
Published: 01 September 2023
... historian who found it hard to read Anglo-Saxon law in a tranquil state of mind. Perhaps no one in the opening years of the twentieth century ought to have been made happier by the appearance of Felix Liebermann's Die Gesetze der Angelsachsen (1903–16), the greatest contribution to the study of Anglo...