What Is a Book?: The Study of Early Printed Books

Author:   Joseph A. Dane
Publisher:   University of Notre Dame Press
ISBN:  

9780268204792


Pages:   294
Publication Date:   15 January 2022
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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What Is a Book?: The Study of Early Printed Books


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Full Product Details

Author:   Joseph A. Dane
Publisher:   University of Notre Dame Press
Imprint:   University of Notre Dame Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.531kg
ISBN:  

9780268204792


ISBN 10:   0268204799
Pages:   294
Publication Date:   15 January 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

. . . an introduction to the material aspect of Western printed books from the fifteenth to the beginning of the nineteenth century. Though this is a well-worked topic, Dane offers a contribution that exhibits several exceptional strengths. . . . Readers also will be pleased with Dane's discussion of books in digital format and will welcome the extensive bibliography. The subject matter may be old, but the treatment is very up-to-date. --Choice . . . contributes to the scholarly field by providing a concise narrative introduction to a field which is inundated by works with similar goals. Used in conjunction with other texts, it certainly will provide a preliminary engagement with somewhat technical language and issues surrounding the field of bibliography. --Comitatus Dane turns to typography, illustrations, bindings, and other page-surface specific aspects of the book, which could have been written only by a person who had spent a lifetime examining books and investigating the methods for transferring ink to paper. He is especially good (and personable) on the provenance of books and the way owners leave marks on them. --SHARP News Dane writes with a clarity that will make this book useful to beginning students, yet with a wealth of examples that can instruct the most experienced scholar. At each stage the book is peppered with warnings about common errors and misconceptions that make it lively reading indeed. --Sixteenth Century Journal Joseph A. Dane is one of our most brilliant and prolific scholars of the early book, and this volume culminates a lifetime of research. For the general reader, it will offer a compelling survey of book history and book making. For the specialist, it will offer insights into the techniques of printers and the lives of collectors. For anyone concerned with how we read the past, and for anyone fascinated by the book as typographical artifact, What Is a Book? will be deeply valued. As Dane himself says in his introduction, 'never close a book without knowing more than you did before opening it.' I never close a book of his without knowing more than when I opened it, and this one is no exception. --Seth Lerer, University of California at San Diego Joseph Dane's What Is a Book? is a remarkable introduction to the study of books as physical objects. It is at once impressively learned and endearingly personal, displaying the fundamental characteristics of all of Dane's work: careful observation, rigorous thinking, and clear and energetic writing. Dane demonstrates what a book is, how it was made, and, perhaps most importantly, how its materiality gives witness to various histories that complicate and enrich our sense of what books mean and why they matter. --David Scott Kastan, Yale University Written with wit and acuity, Joseph A. Dane's What Is a Book?extends his project of teaching aspects of book history to the specialist and nonspecialist reader alike. Both will be stimulated and provoked by what Dane writes, and will also enjoy his arguments and admire the breadth and depth of his knowledge. --Henry Woudhuysen, University College London


""Joseph Dane's What Is a Book? is a remarkable introduction to the study of books as physical objects. It is at once impressively learned and endearingly personal, displaying the fundamental characteristics of all of Dane's work: careful observation, rigorous thinking, and clear and energetic writing. Dane demonstrates what a book is, how it was made, and, perhaps most importantly, how its materiality gives witness to various histories that complicate and enrich our sense of what books mean and why they matter."" —David Scott Kastan, Yale University ""Joseph A. Dane is one of our most brilliant and prolific scholars of the early book, and this volume culminates a lifetime of research. For the general reader, it will offer a compelling survey of book history and book making. For the specialist, it will offer insights into the techniques of printers and the lives of collectors. For anyone concerned with how we read the past, and for anyone fascinated by the book as typographical artifact, What Is a Book? will be deeply valued. As Dane himself says in his introduction, 'never close a book without knowing more than you did before opening it.' I never close a book of his without knowing more than when I opened it, and this one is no exception."" —Seth Lerer, University of California at San Diego ""Written with wit and acuity, Joseph A. Dane's What Is a Book? extends his project of teaching aspects of book history to the specialist and nonspecialist reader alike. Both will be stimulated and provoked by what Dane writes, and will also enjoy his arguments and admire the breadth and depth of his knowledge."" —Henry Woudhuysen, University College London “. . . contributes to the scholarly field by providing a concise narrative introduction to a field which is inundated by works with similar goals. Used in conjunction with other texts, it certainly will provide a preliminary engagement with somewhat technical language and issues surrounding the field of bibliography.” —Comitatus “Dane turns to typography, illustrations, bindings, and other page-surface specific aspects of the book, which could have been written only by a person who had spent a lifetime examining books and investigating the methods for transferring ink to paper. He is especially good (and personable) on the provenance of books and the way owners leave marks on them.” —SHARP News “. . . an introduction to the material aspect of Western printed books from the fifteenth to the beginning of the nineteenth century. Though this is a well-worked topic, Dane offers a contribution that exhibits several exceptional strengths. . . . Readers also will be pleased with Dane’s discussion of books in digital format and will welcome the extensive bibliography. The subject matter may be old, but the treatment is very up-to-date.” —Choice “Dane writes with a clarity that will make this book useful to beginning students, yet with a wealth of examples that can instruct the most experienced scholar. At each stage the book is peppered with warnings about common errors and misconceptions that make it lively reading indeed.” —Sixteenth Century Journal


Author Information

Joseph A. Dane is professor of English at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. He is the author of a number of books, including The Long and the Short of It: A Practical Guide to European Versification Systems (University of Notre Dame Press, 2010) and Out of Sorts: On Typography and Print Culture.

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