
ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Edinburgh University Press
FORMAT: Hardback
ISBN: 9780748625048
RRP: £95.00
PAGES: 400
PUBLICATION DATE:
September 1, 2017
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The Edinburgh History of the Book in Scotland: v. 1: Medieval to 1707
Dr. A. J. Mann
Sally Mapstone
This volume provides a wide and varied account of the history of the book during the medieval and early modern period, up to the Union of the Parliaments in 1707. The medieval and early modern periods saw the foundations and early development of Scottish book culture. While the process began, and continued, with manuscript books, from the middle of the sixteenth century Scotland was also fully participating in the European community of print, importing large quantities of printed books from England and Continental Europe and building up an independent press and bookselling network. In a range of accessible and stimulating chapters written by experts in the field of Scottish book history, emphasis is given to domestic manuscript production in Latin, Scots and Gaelic and the importation of manuscripts and printed books before 1560, as well as to the subsequent expansion in the production and consumption of print. The volume is divided into four sections. The first considers domestic manuscript and printed book production, organization and law, and the second importation, bookselling and ownership of manuscripts and printed books by individuals and institutions.Sections three and four cover topics such as education, politics, music and song, and literature and verse. In section four the book in Scotland is also viewed through various prisms, including anglicisation, humanism and the Reformation. One of the special features of this volume is the series of case studies which are distributed throughout and which consider the role of specific printers, booksellers, libraries, collectors and authors.
Dr. A. J. Mann
Dr. Alastair Mann is Lecturer in Scottish History at the University of Stirling. Sally Mapstone is Fellow and Senior Tutor in Medieval English Language and Literature at St Hilda’s Collge, Oxford. She is author of Scots and their Books in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance (Oxford University Press, 1996); co-editor, with Helen Cooper, of The Long Fifteenth Century (Oxford University Press, 1997) and editor or co-editor of several books on Medieval and Renaissance Scotland.