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The First Print Era examines the rise of print culture during
China’s Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127). Bringing together
often-overlooked primary sources from the period and scholarship on
many individual topics in Song print history, the book offers the
first extended narrative in English of how print became entrenched
as a sustained mode of textual dissemination in China. While
discussing technical innovations and the growth of the print
industry, the book focuses on how the rise of print affected
several indispensable elements of Song intellectual culture: the
expansion of the exam system, the canonization of Tang and earlier
models, the rise of antiquarianism and connoisseurship, the birth
of Neo-Confucianism as a new intellectual force, the growth of a
new literati culture and new forms of literary production and
critique, and the development of calligraphy as an art form that
could be taught, critiqued, and divided into schools. Overall, the
book describes a process by which print publication moved from a
highly centralized state enterprise, back to expanded elite use,
and eventually towards the popular print markets that would create
new forms of expression during the Southern Song and Yuan
dynasties. This book will be an essential read to students and
scholars of Asian studies, Medieval studies, and those with a focus
on print history and Chinese studies.
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