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Blind Impressions - Methods and Mythologies in Book History (Hardcover, New)
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Blind Impressions - Methods and Mythologies in Book History (Hardcover, New)
Series: Material Texts
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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"As bibliographers or book historians, we perform our work by
changing the function of the objects we study. We rarely pick up an
Aldine edition to read one of the classical texts it contains. . .
. Print culture, under this notion, is not a medium for writing or
thought but a historical object of study; our bibliographical
field, our own concoction, becomes the true referent of the objects
we define as its foundation."-From the Introduction What is a book
in the study of print culture? For the scholar of material texts,
it is not only a singular copy carrying the unique traces of
printing and preservation efforts, or an edition, repeated and
repeatable, or a vehicle for ideas to be abstracted from the
physical copy. But when the bibliographer situates a book copy
within the methods of book history, Joseph A. Dane contends, it is
the known set of assumptions which govern the discipline that
bibliographic arguments privilege, repeat, or challenge. "Book
history," he writes, "is us." In Blind Impressions, Dane reexamines
the field of material book history by questioning its most basic
assumptions and definitions. How is print defined? What are the
limits of printing history? What constitutes evidence? His
concluding section takes form as a series of short studies in theme
and variation, considering such matters as two-color printing, the
composing stick used by hand-press printers, the bibliographical
status of book fragments, and the function of scholarly
illustration in the Digital Age. Meticulously detailed, deeply
learned, and often contrarian, Blind Impressions is a bracing
critique of the way scholars define and solve problems.
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