Lucille Chia (Ph.D., Columbia University) is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Riverside. She is the author of Printing for Profit: The Commercial Publishers of Jianyang, Fuijan (11th-17th Centuries) (Harvard University Asia Center, 2003).
Hilde De Weerdt (Ph.D., Harvard University) is University Lecturer in Chinese History at the University of Oxford and Fellow of Pembroke College. She is the author of Competition over Content: Negotiating Standards for the Civil Service Examinations in Imperial China (Harvard University Asia Center, 2007).
The essays in this volume seek to flesh out the diversity of Chinese textual production during the period spanning the tenth and fourteenth centuries when printing became a widely used technology. By exploring the social and political relations that shaped the production and reproduction of printed texts, the impact of intellectual and religious formations on book production, the interaction between print and other media, readership, and the growth of collections, the contributors offer the first comprehensive examination of the cultural history of book production in the first 500 years of the history of printing. In an afterword historian of the early modern European book, Ann Blair, reflects on the volume's implications for the comparative study of the impact of printing.
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really nice volume on the middle (between 'early' and 'late') history of imprints; TJ Hinrichs' contribution on the Song state and medical texts is esp. provocative and exciting.
评分导论不错但是比不上Brokaw那本讲明清的
评分质量比较高的论文集
评分Focusing on the less texually ones, could have gone deeper.
评分着实费了我三天时间
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