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Books > Business & Economics > Industry & industrial studies > Media, information & communication industries > Publishing industry
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Widening Circle CB (Book, Reprint 2016 ed.)
Loot Price: R2,190
Discovery Miles 21 900
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Widening Circle CB (Book, Reprint 2016 ed.)
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Three distinguished authorities offer informed reflections on the
history of books, on literary commerce, and on the reading public
in eighteenth-century England, France, and Germany. Concerned with
an area of study that has gone largely unexplored--the social
function of the book trade and the various agencies of
distribution--Robert Darnton. Roy M. Wiles, and Bernhard Fabian lay
the groundwork for the intellectual, social, and literary historian
as well as the student of political revolutions.Robert Darnton's
rich account of a clandestine book dealer expands our knowledge of
the actual habits of eighteenth-century Frenchmen. We learn about
the livres philosophiques, as they were known in the
trade--obscene. irreligious. or seditious works; about the
intricate circuit of agents linking publisher and bookdealer; and
about a confidence game often surviving on sheer bravura. Darnton
not only gives us a general sense of the literary tastes in a small
provincial city in France on the eve of the Revolution but also
opens the way toward an understanding of the country's entire
literary underground.The late Roy M. Wiles investigates the
principal readership in eighteenth-century England and demonstrates
that intellectual activities were not confined to polite society in
London. Employing new, often untouched materials--newspaper
circulation and delivery figures, book lists and advertisements in
London and local papers, subscription books in provincial towns and
cities--Wiles helps dispel some of the uncertainty surrounding the
question of literacy and shows that, in fact, what the provincial
readers chose to read more accurately registers the eighteenth
century's relish for reading than those books considered by
Londoners as "required" reading.Bernhard Fabian explores the
sources that permit us to assess the circulation of English letters
in Germany during the second half of the eighteenth century. By
considering the kind of information obtained from subscription
lists, by studying the relation of English literature to the
general reader of the period, and by examining the emergence of a
reading public that actually read English, Fabian helps delineate a
broad view of the contemporary reading scene in eighteenth-century
Germany.
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