Printing Power

Printing Power
Author: Jan Z. Olsen,Emily F. Knapton
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2008
Genre: Education
ISBN: 189162766X

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Saddle stiched student workbook

Printing Power

Printing Power
Author: Jan Z. Olsen,Emily F. Knapton,Handwriting without Tears, Inc
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 96
Release: 2013-01-01
Genre: Handwriting
ISBN: 193482562X

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Printing Power and Piety

Printing  Power  and Piety
Author: Brad C. Pardue
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 247
Release: 2012-08-27
Genre: History
ISBN: 9789004232068

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This book explores the important implications of printed vernacular appeals to a nascent public by the reformer William Tyndale, by religious conservatives such as Thomas More, and by Henry VIII’s regime in the volatile early years of the English Reformation.

Print and Power in Early Modern Europe 1500 1800

Print and Power in Early Modern Europe  1500   1800
Author: Nina Lamal,Jamie Cumby,Helmer J. Helmers
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 461
Release: 2021-06-08
Genre: History
ISBN: 9789004448896

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Print, in the early modern period, could make or break power. This volume addresses one of the most urgent and topical questions in early modern history: how did European authorities use a new medium with such tremendous potential? The eighteen contributors develop new perspectives on the relationship between the rise of print and the changing relationships between subjects and rulers by analysing print’s role in early modern bureaucracy, the techniques of printed propaganda, genres, and strategies of state communication. While print is often still thought of as an emancipating and disruptive force of change in early modern societies, the resulting picture shows how instrumental print was in strengthening existing power structures. Contributors: Renaud Adam, Martin Christ, Jamie Cumby, Arthur der Weduwen, Nora Epstein, Andreas Golob, Helmer Helmers, Jan Hillgärtner, Rindert Jagersma, Justyna Kiliańczyk-Zięba, Nina Lamal, Margaret Meserve, Rachel Midura, Gautier Mingous, Ernesto E. Oyarbide Magaña, Caren Reimann, Chelsea Reutchke, Celyn David Richards, Paolo Sachet, Forrest Strickland, and Ramon Voges.

The Power of Print in Modern China

The Power of Print in Modern China
Author: Robert Culp
Publsiher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 409
Release: 2019-05-28
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780231545358

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Amid early twentieth-century China’s epochal shifts, a vital and prolific commercial publishing industry emerged. Recruiting late Qing literati, foreign-trained academics, and recent graduates of the modernized school system to work as authors and editors, publishers produced textbooks, reference books, book series, and reprints of classical texts in large quantities at a significant profit. Work for major publishers provided a living to many Chinese intellectuals and offered them a platform to transform Chinese cultural life. In The Power of Print in Modern China, Robert Culp explores the world of commercial publishing to offer a new perspective on modern China’s cultural transformations. Culp examines China’s largest and most influential publishing companies—Commercial Press, Zhonghua Book Company, and World Book Company—during the late Qing and Republican periods and into the early years of the People’s Republic. He reconstructs editors’ cultural activities and work lives as a lens onto the role of intellectuals in cultural change. Examining China’s distinct modes of industrial publishing, Culp explains the emergence of the modern Chinese intellectual through commercial and industrial processes rather than solely through political revolution and social movements. An original account of Chinese intellectual and cultural history as well as global book history, The Power of Print in Modern China illuminates the production of new forms of knowledge and culture in the twentieth century.

SOME DEGREE OF POWER Preindustrial American Printing Trades 1778 1815 C

SOME DEGREE OF POWER  Preindustrial American Printing Trades  1778 1815  C
Author: Mark A. Lause
Publsiher: University of Arkansas Press
Total Pages: 286
Release: 1991
Genre: Printers
ISBN: 1610753860

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Print and Power

Print and Power
Author: Shawn Frederick McHale
Publsiher: University of Hawaii Press
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2004-01-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0824826558

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In this ambitious and path-breaking book, Shawn McHale challenges long held views that define modern Vietnamese history in terms of anticolonial nationalism and revolution. McHale argues instead for a historiography that does not overstress either the role of politics in general or communism in particular. Using a wide range of sources from Vietnam, France, and the United States, many of them previously unexploited, he shows how the use of printed matter soared between 1920 and 1945 and in the process transformed Vietnamese public life and shaped the modern Vietnamese consciousnesss. Print and Power examines the impact of the French colonial state on Vietnamese society as well as Vietnamese and East Asian understandings of public discourse and public space. The work goes on to contest the impact of Confucianism on pre-modern and modern Vietnam and, based on materials never before used, provides a radically new perspective on the rise of Vietnamese communism from 1929 to 1945.

Print and Power in France and England 1500 1800

Print and Power in France and England  1500 1800
Author: Adrian Armstrong
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 239
Release: 2016-12-05
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781351908894

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What was the relationship between power and the public sphere in early modern society? How did the printed media inform this relationship? Contributors to this volume address those questions by examining the interaction of print and power in France and England during the 'hand-press period'. Four interconnected and overlapping themes emerge from these studies, showing the essential historical and contextual considerations shaping the strategies both of power and of those who challenged it via the written word during this period. The first is reading and control, which examines the relationship between institutional power and readers, either as individuals or as a group. A second is propaganda on behalf of institutional power, and the ways in which such writings engage with the rhetorics of power and their reception. The Academy constitutes a third theme, in which contributors explore the economic and political implications of publishing in the context of intellectual elites. The last theme is clientism and faction, which examines the competing political discourses and pressures which influenced widely differing forms of publication. From these articles there emerges a global view of the relationship between print and power, which takes the debate beyond the narrowly theoretical to address fundamental questions of how print sought to challenge, or reinforce, existing power-structures, both from within and from without.