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E-raamat: History of the Book in East Asia

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The history of the book in East Asia is closely linked to problems of language and script, problems which have also had a profound impact on the technology of printing and on the social and intellectual impact of print in this area. This volume contains key readings on the history of printed books and manuscripts in China, Korea and Japan and includes an introduction which provides an overview of the history of the book in East Asia and sets the readings in their context.

Arvustused

Brokaw and Kornicki clearly present in their volume some general features of Chinese, Korean, and Japanese book cultures which, put together, roughly outline the historical landscape of the printed book in East Asia. Their book is the first step towards a transnational history of the book in East Asia...Its reprinted inclusions are worth reading for historians of the book in East Asia and students interested in transnational and comparative studies. Library and Information History

Acknowledgements vii
Series Preface xi
Introduction xiii
PART I CHINA
1 Joseph McDermott (2006), `The Making of an Imprint in China, 1000-1800', in A Social History of the Chinese Book: Books and Literati Culture in Late Imperial China, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, pp. 9-42, 196-211
3(50)
2 Maggie Bickford (2006), `Tu and Shu: Illustrated Manuscripts in the Great Age of Song Printing', in Ming Wilson and Stacey Pierson (eds), The Art of the Book in China, Colloquies on Art & Archaeology in Asia No. 23, London: Percival David Foundation, pp. 61-82
53(22)
3 Hilde de Weerdt (2006), `Byways in the Imperial Chinese Information Order: The Dissemination and Commercial Publication of State Documents', Harvard Journal of Asiatic Societies, 66, pp. 145-86
75(42)
4 Lucille Chia (2003), `Mashaben: Commercial Publishing in Jianyang from the Song to the Ming', in Paul Smith and Richard Von Glahn (eds), The Song-Yuan-Ming Transition in Chinese History, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center, pp. 284-328
117(58)
5 Anne E. McLaren (1995), `Ming Audiences and Vernacular Hermeneutics: The Uses of The Romance of the Three Kingdoms', Toung Pao, 81, pp. 51-80
175(30)
6 Kai-wing Chow (1996), `Writing for Success: Printing, Examinations, and Intellectual Change in Late Ming China', Late Imperial China, 17, pp. 120-57
205(38)
7 Ellen Widmer (1996), "The Huanduzhai of Hangzhou and Suzhou: A Study in Seventeenth-Century Publishing', Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, 56, pp. 77-122
243(46)
8 Anne Burkus-Chasson (2005), `Visual Hermeneutics and the Act of Turning the Leaf: A Genealogy of Liu Yuan's Lingyan ge', in Cynthia Brokaw and Kai-wing Chow (eds), Printing and Book Culture in Late Imperial China, Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 371-416
289(46)
9 Cynthia J. Brokaw (1996), `Commercial Publishing in Late Imperial China: The Zou and Ma Family Businesses of Sibao, Fujian', Late Imperial China, 17, pp. 49-92
335(46)
PART II KOREA
10 Martina Deuchler (2003), `Propagating Female Virtues in Choson Korea', in Dorothy Ko, JaHyun Kim Haboush and Joan R. Piggott (eds), Women and Confucian Cultures in Premodern China, Korea, and Japan, Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 142-69
381(28)
11 Michael Kim (2004), `Literary Production, Circulating Libraries, and Private Publishing: The Popular Reception of Vernacular Fiction Texts in the Late Choson Dynasty', Journal of Korean Studies, 9, pp. 1-31
409(34)
PART III JAPAN
12 K.B. Gardner (1990), `Centres of Printing in Medieval Japan: Late Heian to Early Edo Period', in Yu-Ying Brown (ed.), Japanese Studies, British Library Occasional Papers 11, London, pp. 157-69
443(14)
13 P.F. Kornicki (1990), `Provincial Publishing in the Tokugawa Period', in Yu-Ying Brown (ed.), Japanese Studies, British Library Occasional Papers 11, London, pp. 188-97
457(10)
14 P.F. Kornicki (2006), `Manuscript, not Print: Scribal Culture in the Edo Period', Journal of Japanese Studies, 32, pp. 23-52
467(30)
15 W.J. Boot, `The Transfer of Learning: The Import of Chinese and Dutch Books in Tokugawa Japan', in E. Groenendijk, C. Vialle and L. Blusse (eds), Canton and Nagasaki Compared 1730-1830: Dutch, Chinese, Japanese Relations: Transactions, Leiden: IGEER, pp. 45-56
497(12)
16 Andrew Markus (1989), `The Daiso Lending Library of Nagoya, 1767-1899', Gest Library Journal, 3, pp. 5-34
509(30)
17 Ekkehard May (2005), `Books and Book Illustrations in Early Modern Japan', in S. Formanek and S. Linhart (eds), Written Texts - Visual Texts: Woodblock Printed Media in Early Modern Japan, Amsterdam: Hotei, pp. 25-46
539(22)
18 Henry D. Smith II (1994), `The History of the Book in Edo and Paris', in J.L. McClain, J.M. Merriman and K. Ugawa (eds), Edo and Paris: Urban Life and the State in the Early Modern Era, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, pp. 332-52
561(22)
19 Giles Richter (1997), `Entrepreneurship and Culture: The Hakubunkan Publishing Empire in Meiji Japan', in H. Hardacre and A.L. Kern (eds), New Directions in the Study of Meiji Japan, Leiden: Brill, pp. 590-602
583(14)
Name Index 597
Cynthia Brokaw is Professor of History at Brown University, USA and Peter Kornicki is Professor of Japanese Studies in the Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Cambridge, UK.