Print, Manuscript & Performance: The Changing Relations of the Media in Early Modern EnglandArthur F. Marotti, Michael D. Bristol Ohio State University Press, 2000 - 322 Seiten The eleven essays in this volume explore the complex interactions in early modern England between a technologically advanced culture of the printed book and a still powerful traditional culture of the spoken word, spectacle, and manuscript. Scholars who work on manuscript culture, the history of printing, cultural history, historical bibliography, and the institutions of early modern drama and theater have been brought together to address such topics as the social character of texts, historical changes in notions of literary authority and intellectual property, the mutual influence and tensions between the different forms of "publication," and the epistemological and social implications of various communications technologies. Although canonical literary writers such as Shakespeare, Jonson, and Rochester are discussed, the field of writing examined is a broad one, embracing political speeches, coterie manuscript poetry, popular pamphlets, parochially targeted martyrdom accounts, and news reports. Setting writers, audiences, and texts in their specific historical context, the contributors focus on a period in early modern England, from the late sixteenth through the late seventeenth century, when the shift from orality and manuscript communication to print was part of large-scale cultural change. Arthur F. Marotti's and Michael D. Bristol's introduction analyzes some of the sociocultural issues implicit in the collection and relates the essays to contemporary work in textual studies, bibliography, and publication history. |
Im Buch
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... sense printing was simply one of the more vivid and obvious manifestations of a more general reconfiguration of the techno- logical infrastructure , or " the machine " in Mumford's terms . Furthermore , printing had to compete from the ...
... sense of a cultural service available for purchase but also in Albert Borgmann's sense of " the device paradigm . " Theater organized along the lines of commodity exchange was a technical innovation that made a desired social good ...
... sense of pretending to do something , as when an actor performs a role , but rather the sense of just doing something , as when a priest performs a ritual or a military officer performs his duty . The performative is not a self ...
Inhalt
The Rapes of Lucina | 16 |
From Oral Delivery to Print in the Speeches of Elizabeth I | 33 |
The Structural Transformation of Print in Late | 49 |
Urheberrecht | |
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