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The Printing Revolution in Early Modern Europe
Summarises the initial changes introduced by the establishment of printing shops and discusses how printing affected major cultural movements.
Elizabeth L. Eisenstein (Author)
9781107632752, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 29 March 2012
401 pages, 66 b/w illus. 2 maps
21.5 x 13.8 x 2.1 cm, 0.58 kg
'This is a good and important book … the author's clear and forceful style makes it a pleasure to read.' The New York Review of Books
In 1979 Elizabeth Eisenstein provided the first full-scale treatment of the fifteenth-century printing revolution in the West in her monumental two-volume work, The Printing Press as an Agent of Change. This abridged edition, after summarising the initial changes introduced by the establishment of printing shops, goes on to discuss how printing challenged traditional institutions and affected three major cultural movements: the Renaissance, the Reformation and the rise of modern science. Also included is a later essay which aims to demonstrate that the cumulative processes created by printing are likely to persist despite the recent development of new communications technologies.
Part I. The Emergence of Print Culture in the West: 1. The unacknowledged revolution
2. Defining the initial shift
3. Some features of print culture
4. The expanding Republic of Letters
Part II. Interaction with Other Developments: 5. The permanent Renaissance: mutation of a classical revival
6. Western Christendom disrupted: resetting the stage for Reformation
7. The book of nature transformed: printing and the rise of modern science
8. Conclusion: scripture and nature transformed
Afterword: revisiting the printing revolution.
Subject Areas: Printing, packaging & reprographic industry [KNTR], Early modern history: c 1450/1500 to c 1700 [HBLH], European history [HBJD]