Description
Book SynopsisWhat did most people read? Where did they get it? Where did it come from? What were its uses in its readers'' lives? How was it produced and distributed? What were its relations to the wider world of print culture? How did it develop over time? These questions are central toThe Oxford History of Popular Print Culture, an ambitious nine-volume series devoted to the exploration of popular print culture in English from the beginning of the sixteenth century to the present.Between the beginning of the sixteenth century and the later seventeenth, governments, institutions and individuals learned to use inexpensively-produced printed texts to inform, entertain, and persuade. Cheap print quickly became rooted in British and Irish culture, both elite and popular. This substantial and authoritative collection of essays - the first of its kind - examines the developing role of popular printed texts in the first two centuries of print in Britain and Ireland. Its forty-five chapters (with sixty-si
Trade Reviewthe work is richly illustrated with photographs of all sorts of early modern documents that help bring the discussions home to us. The book (like the series of which it is part) is something we would expect every major university library to buy, and for students of popular culture, print culture, and popular print culture to make much use of. * Jonathan Roper, Folklore *
a sophisticated, balanced overview of the current state of research into the social, cultural and political role popular print played in early modern Britain ... it will prove to be indispensible for scholars researching the cultural history of this period, as well as for librarians whose role it is to preserve these ephemeral relics of the past for future generations. * Erika Delbecque, University of Surrey *
the very considerable range of contemporary printed sources deployed here is testimony to the contributors and their subject alike. * David McKitterick, Library and Information History *
Popular culture is proverbially evanescent, so attempting to grasp the ephemera of an earlier age is a difficult task ... It is this vanished world that this impressive and authoritative volume, the first in the Oxford History of Popular Print Culture and the first of its kind, aims to recover ... [The] diversity is one of the book's major strengths, allowing the topic to be pursued across multiple different genres and critical perspectives. * Harriet Phillips, Cambridge Quarterly *
Table of ContentsPREFACE; LIST OF TABLES; LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS; NOTES ON CONVENTIONS; NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS; CHRONOLOGY; PART ONE: HISTORICAL CONTEXTS; PART TWO: SOME INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS; PART THREE: THEMES; PART FOUR: FORMS AND GENRES; PART FIVE: CASE STUDIES; BIBLIOGRAPHY