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The Medieval Book: Illustrated from the…
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The Medieval Book: Illustrated from the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (MART: The Medieval Academy Reprints for Teaching) (1988 original; edición 1991)

por Barbara Shailor (Autor)

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For centuries philologists, linguists, and historians have read medieval books to study the language of a given work or to establish an accurate and readable text. Art historians also have considered illuminated manuscripts as important repositories for works of art. But in recent decades new interest has developed in the over-all physical format of the medieval book and its historical context - how manuscript books were made and how they have deepened our understanding of the intellectual and social milieu of the Middle Ages and Renaissance. One of the richest storehouses of early manuscripts is Yale University's Beinecke Library. Its collection provides the basis for Barbara Shailor's fully illustrated study of the medieval book and its place in society. Shailor first examines the manuscript books as an archaeological artifact of a period when mass-production was unknown and every volume had to be written and assembled by hand. She then groups books by genre - both religious and secular - to show how the contents of a volume and its function within society influenced its physical appearance and the way in which it was produced. A brief look at the transition from manuscript to printed book concludes the survey. Originally published by the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library in 1988, this work has quickly become an indispensable guide for scholars in a wide range of medieval studies.… (más)
Miembro:bks1953
Título:The Medieval Book: Illustrated from the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (MART: The Medieval Academy Reprints for Teaching)
Autores:Barbara Shailor (Autor)
Información:University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division (1991), Edition: 2nd Revised ed., 115 pages
Colecciones:Lista de deseos
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Etiquetas:Librarian Studies, Middle Ages

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The Medieval Book: Illustrated from the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library por Barbra A. Shailor (1988)

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A really wonderful introductory text for anyone interested in bookbinding, illumination, or scripts, as well as different types of manuscripts and codices. I bought this for a class and am glad to have purchased it because it will make a handy reference. It's so short that I definitely recommend it as a starting point for anyone getting into the field. It goes very well with Raymond Clemens' book, "Introduction to Manuscript Studies." ( )
  Kristin_Curdie_Cook | Apr 29, 2016 |
This has a little bit of everything related to books - bindings, parchment, techniques, styles, page layouts, scripts, tools, history, you name it. My favorite is the picture of a girdle book. (This was actually a textbook for a class I took in college.) It's a good book to have around when a question comes about some aspect of scribing that you haven't done before/aren't really interested in for it's own sake, and thus don't have full books about it. (Such as bookbinding for me.) ( )
  mpalotay | Mar 15, 2007 |
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For thousands of years literary texts and documents were written not on parchment or paper, the preferred materials of the Middle Ages, but on sheets produced from the fibrous stalks of the papyrus plant.
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For centuries philologists, linguists, and historians have read medieval books to study the language of a given work or to establish an accurate and readable text. Art historians also have considered illuminated manuscripts as important repositories for works of art. But in recent decades new interest has developed in the over-all physical format of the medieval book and its historical context - how manuscript books were made and how they have deepened our understanding of the intellectual and social milieu of the Middle Ages and Renaissance. One of the richest storehouses of early manuscripts is Yale University's Beinecke Library. Its collection provides the basis for Barbara Shailor's fully illustrated study of the medieval book and its place in society. Shailor first examines the manuscript books as an archaeological artifact of a period when mass-production was unknown and every volume had to be written and assembled by hand. She then groups books by genre - both religious and secular - to show how the contents of a volume and its function within society influenced its physical appearance and the way in which it was produced. A brief look at the transition from manuscript to printed book concludes the survey. Originally published by the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library in 1988, this work has quickly become an indispensable guide for scholars in a wide range of medieval studies.

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