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print culture
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Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2018) 48 (1): 11–40.
Published: 01 January 2018
... in both the interior world of the human frame and in the macrocosm of the terrestrial world is shown to be very much the product of developing print culture. European navigators and natural philosophers, in their distinct spheres, were keen to preserve not just a record of the priority of discovery...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2015) 45 (3): 523–542.
Published: 01 September 2015
... structural binding supports to unexpected, idiosyncratic stitching done by readers in paper pages, speculating that print opened up and diversified opportunities for crafting text rather than closing off the book from manual interventions more familiar to us from medieval manuscript culture. © 2015 by Duke...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2017) 47 (2): 359–390.
Published: 01 May 2017
... inventories of the time usually
do not list them.12 However, the print circuit of these works also included
those in the highest echelons of society, such as Elizabeth I and James I.13
The audience for these prints cannot be divided between the axis points of
“high” and “low” culture, since it cuts...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2021) 51 (1): 79–104.
Published: 01 January 2021
... Romae (1494). Composed in the popular cantare verse form, which was strongly associated with public performance, these works are an unusual example of printed guides to Rome aimed specifically at an Italian audience. Situating Dati’s cantari within the broader culture of the Roman pilgrimage...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2012) 42 (3): 635–655.
Published: 01 September 2012
... the advent
of print. It passed by word of mouth, in correspondence, in ballads, and
through all manner of social discourse. The advent of print culture and the
rise of published news sporadically in pamphlets and then more regularly
in corantos and weekly newsbooks in the first half...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2015) 45 (3): 505–521.
Published: 01 September 2015
... into the many ways that women of all social ranks contributed to the making, weaving, writing, printing, etching, annotating, composing, and publishing of English literary culture. This essay takes a fresh look at the authorship of Isabella Whitney, the earliest identified woman to publish secular English verse...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2017) 47 (3): 415–435.
Published: 01 September 2017
..., printed annotations and paratextual devices, forms of textual circulation, and the nature of literary allusion and cultural reuse. © 2017 by Duke University Press 2017 English and Latin Bible manuscript annotation history of the book and reading reader marks...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2020) 50 (1): 53–73.
Published: 01 January 2020
... as diverse as neopagans, female religious, and abortion rights activists, Brigid has been remolded repeatedly to suit the cultural needs of contemporaries. The arrival of print and the division of western Christendom into Protestant and Catholic confessions created new challenges for those who wanted...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2020) 50 (3): 633–657.
Published: 01 September 2020
... of post-Reformation apocalyptic drama and, more immediately, as participating in the extended print and performance history of the confessionally charged Jacobean history play. Combining an apocalyptic vision of history and chivalric language and imagery within a cultural framework of Elizabethan...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2002) 32 (3): 469–491.
Published: 01 September 2002
... and
the ways that she uses their objectivity to represent her subjectivity as a
woman author who appropriates both the conventions of presentation
manuscripts and of print culture. Every material feature of Inglis’s books
asserts her project, to assemble and publish exquisite textual objects whose
value...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2006) 36 (2): 455–473.
Published: 01 May 2006
... culture
9. Print culture
10. Essay collections
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 36:2, Spring 2006
© 2006 by Duke University Press
1. Editions and translations
Boethius. De consolatione philosophiae; Opuscula theologica...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2006) 36 (2): 475–477.
Published: 01 May 2006
.... Print culture
10. Essay collections
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 36:2, Spring 2006
© 2006 by Duke University Press
1. Editions and translations
Boethius. De consolatione philosophiae; Opuscula theologica. Edited by Clau...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2015) 45 (3): 543–556.
Published: 01 September 2015
... with a red pen.
Print culture made images more accessible, more widespread, more
portable, cheaper and more open to manipulation than ever before, and so
prints themselves may have invited the kind of interaction seen in this volume
of Passion cycle engravings. However, the impulse to act...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2022) 52 (3): 593–610.
Published: 01 September 2022
... plates, 5 halftones, 1 map. $60.00. [On the post-print culture of Ireland, Gaelic-speaking Scotland, Iceland, and the Faroe Islands, where chirographic transmission remained the norm until well into the modern era.] Gameson, Richard. Literature and Devotion in Later Medieval England: A Selection...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2007) 37 (3): 531–547.
Published: 01 September 2007
... thematic and structural coherence. The Chester cycle’s open-
ness to alignment with conflicting religious and doctrinal positions, as we
shall see, coincides with the changing character of religious discourses made
available in sixteenth-century print culture, especially the appropriation...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2000) 30 (3): 463–477.
Published: 01 September 2000
... convincingly demonstrate, philology’s obses-
sion with origins is an outgrowth of nineteenth-century nationalism; the
need for the nation to imagine a textuality that creates an ethnic, linguistic
and racial identity weds philology to the nation.26 As European print-culture...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2000) 30 (1): 101–124.
Published: 01 January 2000
...
Adrian Johns offers a fuller critique of “print logic,” a term that he believes
hides the labors of the human agents who constructed specific print cultures
to meet specific needs.17 If print seems to be an “objectifying medium,”
Johns’s argument implies, it is because...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2021) 51 (3): 577–585.
Published: 01 September 2021
... littoral, which made writing easier and reading cheaper, coupled with the introduction of print technology after 1455. While these material changes did not render manuscript culture obsolete, they increased the quantity and kinds of documentation accessible to contemporaries, and to future scholars...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2012) 42 (2): 487–506.
Published: 01 May 2012
... and reform
7. Sexuality and erotic desire
8. Animalia
9. Books in manuscript and print
10. Visual culture
11. Music
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 42:2, Spring 2012
DOI 10.1215/10829636-1571948 © 2012 by Duke University...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2020) 50 (1): 1–12.
Published: 01 January 2020
..., discov- ering only what was published and printed and what the readers purchased or borrowed. 2 Concerned, like Darnton, with print culture, Lynch and Ender s point nevertheless has relevance for the dynamics of reception his- tory across all periods: we can only work with the evidence we have (whether...