السبت، 12 أكتوبر 2024

Download PDF | Ann-marie Hansen (editor), Arthur Der Weduwen (editor) - Publishers, Censors and Collectors in the European Book Trade, 1650-1750 (Library of the Written Word_ the Handpress World, 126)-Brill 2019.

Download PDF | Ann-marie Hansen (editor), Arthur Der Weduwen (editor) - Publishers, Censors and Collectors in the European Book Trade, 1650-1750 (Library of the Written Word_ the Handpress World, 126)-Brill 2019.

343 Pages 




Notes on Contributors 

Leonardo Anatrini PhD, is a research fellow and adjunct professor in the History of Science and Technology at the University of Florence. His research topics concern the evolution of the relations between science and belief from the 16th to the 20th century, with a particular interest in the history of alchemy and chemistry, the history of censorship and scientific communication.





Helwi Blom is a literary historian whose research focuses on early modern France. Her scholarly interests include popular print (the Bibliothèque bleue), library history, the Huguenot diaspora and reception studies. She is currently lecturer in French at Radboud University (Nijmegen). She also holds a Postdoctoral Fellowship at the Université Lumière Lyon 2. Recent publications comprise articles on narrative fiction in the Bibliothèque bleue de Normandie, a newly discovered sixteenth-century edition of Robert le Diable, and sale catalogues of seventeenth-century Huguenot book collections. She is co-editor of Private Libraries and their Documentation 1665–1830. Studying and interpreting sources (Brill, 2023); Top Ten Fictional Narratives in Early Modern Europe. Translation, Dissemination and Mediality (De Gruyter, 2023), and Du Calendrier des Bergers au Pantagruel; l’atelier Nourry à Lyon au début du XVIe siècle (Droz, forthcoming)







Alberto José Campillo Pardo holds a PhD in History from the Universidad de Sevilla. His research focus has been in two main areas: the circulation of knowledge between Spain and New Granada in the Early Modern Period and the inquisitorial and gubernamental censorship in the Hispanic Monarchy. He has published several works on these subjects with high impact publishers, such as Brill, Palgrave MacMillan, Comares, and the Universidad de Sevilla. He is currently a member of the ERC project ‘Before Copyright’ at the University of Oslo






Xevi Camprubí is Associate Professor of Early Modern History and the History of Journalism at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. He obtained his PhD in 2014 with the thesis L’impressor Rafael Figueró (1642–1726) i la premsa a la Catalunya del seu temps (Fundació Noguera, 2018). He has also published La premsa a Catalunyadurant la Guerra de Successió (PUV, 2016), La revolució de la imprenta. La contribució de la tipografia al desenvolupament de la Catalunya moderna (Afers, 2020) and Els mestres de minyons i l’ensenyament públic a la Catalunya Moderna (segles XVI–XVIII) (Fundació Noguera, 2023). His research is focused on the study of the printing industry, the circulation of information, the origins of the periodical press and literacy in the early modern period.








Idalia García is a researcher at the Library Science and Information Research Institute in the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). She received her PhD in Scientific Documentation from the University of Granada (1999). She is the author of numerous articles dedicated to book production, the inquisitorial control of books and the history of libraries in New Spain. She has research in progress on “The Witnesses of Book’s Culture: Bibliographical Canon and Circulation of Knowledge in Colonial Mexico (2021–2024)” and she is studying for a doctorate in History at the Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia in Spain (UNED).







Mona Garloff is assistant professor at the Institute of History, University of Innsbruck. From 2013–2020 she was assistant professor at the University of Stuttgart. She studied history, philosophy and politics in Munich and Paris and completed her PhD in Frankfurt and Trento in 2013 (Irenik, Gelehrsamkeit und Politik. Jean Hotman und der europäische Religionskonflikt um 1600. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2014). Her current research projects are a second book project on the Central European book trade in the Early Modern Period (“Foreign Booksellers in Vienna and Prague, 1680–1750”) and a research project on “Historical and Philosophical Perspectives on Academic Failure”. Her research interests are the History of the Book in the 17th–18th Centuries; Early Modern History of the Habsburg Monarchy, Central Europe and France; Cultural History of Early Modern Commerce; Political Theory and Intellectual History 1500–1800; and Reformation History and Religious Conciliation in Early Modern Europe.








Doris Gruber is a historian and art historian, currently based at the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna. Her research revolves around the question of the relationship between media and knowledge change in the early modern period and explores how new digital methods may stimulate new findings. She authored Frühneuzeitlicher Wissenswandel: Kometenerscheinungen in der Druckpublizistik des Heiligen Römischen Reiches (Bremen: edition lumière 2020) that discusses early modern comet apparitions and their perceptions in the Holy Roman Empire and was awarded the Frances Stephen Award and the Jubiläumspreis des Böhlau Verlages Wien. She also publishes on digital humanities, travel writing, and Ottoman–European relations.








Hanna de Lange completed her Universal Short Title Catalogue (USTC) PhD at the University of St Andrews in 2023. Her doctoral research studied the dissemination of English and Irish books on the early modern northern European book market. She graduated from the University of Amsterdam with a degree in Early Modern History. Her thesis explored the news consumption of a seventeenth-century Dutch militiaman, as related in his diary. She contributed to various editions for the research project ‘Correspondence of Johan de Witt (1625–1672)’ at the Huygens Institute in the Netherlands. She co-authored an article with Andrew Pettegree for The Oxford Handbook of the History of the Book in Early Modern England (Oxford, 2023), edited by Adam Smyth.








Alexandra Ortolja-Baird is a Lecturer in Digital History and Culture at the University of Portsmouth and a Visiting Researcher at The British Museum. 

Jessica G. Purdy is Associate Lecturer in Early Modern History at the University of St Andrews. She is the co-editor of Communities of Print: Books and their Readers in Early Modern Europe (Brill, 2021). She is also the author of Reading Between the Lines: Parish Libraries and their Readers in Early Modern England, 1558–1709 (Brill, 2023), which explores the foundation and use of parish libraries and examines marginalia in surviving parish library books. Her research focuses on the social history of early modern England and Scotland, particularly the history of the book and reading, education and identity.



 

enior researcher at the Faculty of Humanities of the University of Utrecht. His main research interests include early modern book history, cultural history, the history of science and popular culture. He recently published an edited volume (co-edited by Massimo Rospocher and Hanu Salmi) entitled Crossing Borders, Crossing Cultures. Popular Print in Europe (1450–1900) (De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2019). In 2014 he published his monograph Pedlars and the popular press. Itinerant distribution networks in England and the Netherlands (1600–1850) (Brill, 2014). From 2016–2018 he led the project ‘The European dimensions of popular print culture’ (EDPOP). Dr Salman is a member of the ‘Descartes Centre of History and Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities’ (Utrecht University) and board member of the book historical association the Dr. P.A. Tielestichting.






Philippe Bernhard Schmid is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Basel funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF). He completed his PhD in Modern History at the University of St Andrews in 2022. His research focuses on the early modern history of knowledge, the history of science, material culture and the history of collecting. In 2020 and 2021 he was a visiting fellow at Freie Universität Berlin and Harvard University. In 2023 he was a Centre for Research Collections Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities (IASH) at the University of Edinburgh.








Dominique Varry is professor emeritus at the École nationale supérieure des sciences de l’information et des bibliothèques, part of the University of Lyon. He is an expert on the history of the French book in the Ancien Régime, and is the author of numerous monographs and articles in that field.









 




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