Darrera modificació: 2015-08-02 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Petrucci, Armando, Writers and Readers in Medieval Italy: Studies in the History of Written Culture, edited and translated by Charles M. Radding, New Haven, Conn. - Londres, Yale University Press, 1995, xiii + 257 pp.
- Resum
- In this fascinating book, one of the world's foremost authorities on writing and the social history of books discusses reading and writing in medieval Italy. Armando Petrucci addresses concerns central to paleographers and to cultural historians: how people learned to write, what they wrote, what they read, how scribes were trained, the purposes for which books were copied, and how ideas about books influenced their use, preservation, and transmission.
Contents:
* 1. From the unitary book to the miscellany · 1 = Petrucci (1986), "Dal libro unitario al libro ..."
* 2. The Christian conception of the book in the sixth and seventh centuries · 19
* 3. The Lombard problem · 43
* 4. Book, handwriting, and school · 59
* 5. Literacy and graphic culture of early medieval scribes · 77
* 6. Symbolic aspects of written evidence · 103
* 7. Reading in the Middle Ages · 132
* 8. Minute, autograph, author's book · 145
* 9. Reading and writing volgare in medieval Italy · 169
* 10. The illusion of authentic history: documentary evidence · 236
- Matèries
- Història de la cultura
Lectura i escriptura Codicologia Paleografia
- Notes
- Recull d'articles publicats anteriorment en italià, revisats i traduïts a l'anglès.
Trad. it.: Scrivere e leggere nell'Italia medievale, Milà, Sylvestre Bonnard, 2007.
- URL
- http://books.google.cat/books?id=0moP1Fy6xIEC&lpg=P ...
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