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1.
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Mediaevalia:
Volume >
41
Marilynn R. Desmond
The Matter of the Premodern Book
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2.
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Mediaevalia:
Volume >
41
Dana M. Polanichka
Maternity and Spiritual Progression in Dhuoda’s Liber manualis (840s CE)
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3.
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Mediaevalia:
Volume >
41
Lisa M. C. Weston
Honeyed Words and Waxen Tablets:
Aldhelm’s Bees and the Materiality of Anglo-Saxon Literacy
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4.
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Mediaevalia:
Volume >
41
Joyce Coleman
The Matter of Pseudo-History:
Textuality, Aurality, and Visuality in the Arthurian Vulgate Cycle
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5.
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Mediaevalia:
Volume >
41
Deborah McGrady
Textual Bodies and Manuscript Matters:
The Case of Turin State Archives, MS J.b.IX.10
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6.
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Mediaevalia:
Volume >
41
Lucille Chia
Printing and Publishing in East Asia through circa 1600:
An Extremely Brief Survey
abstract |
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The history of book culture and printing in East Asia shows how different cultures that used the same manuscript and print techniques to produce many of the same books in the same language (Chinese) developed distinctive book cultures. This essay focuses on China and compares its book culture with those of Korea and Japan, from the inception of woodblock printing around the late seventh century until about 1600. Other peoples were also heavily influenced throughout history by Chinese culture in East Asia and Inner Asia, such as the Mongols, Khitans, Tanguts, and Uighurs. We should note, however, that some of the peoples in this vast area adopted and modified the Chinese writing system, even if their languages were very different from Chinese. They also used printing technologies from China—both woodblock and movable type, often within a century of the development of a writing system for their own languages. The history of the uses of printing technologies and their adoption and adaptation in different cultures therefore helps us understand the nature of technologies in general.
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7.
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Mediaevalia:
Volume >
41
Beatrice Arduini
Dante’s Convivio between Manuscript and Print
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8.
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Mediaevalia:
Volume >
41
David Lavinsky
William Thorpe’s Other Books:
“Second Generation” Wycliffism and the Glossed Gospels
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9.
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Mediaevalia:
Volume >
41
Mark Cruse
“Pleasure in Foreign Things”:
Global Entanglement in the Livre des merveilles du monde (Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, fr. 2810)
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