Darrera modificació: 2017-05-31 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Blair, Ann, "The Dedication Strategies of Conrad Gessner", dins: Manning, Gideon - Klestinec, Cynthia (eds.), Professors, Physicians and Practices in the History of Medicine: Essays in Honor of Nancy Siraisi, Berlín, Springer, 2017, pp. 169-209.
- Resum
- The 102 dedications composed by the sixteenth-century physician and polymath Conrad Gessner between 1541 and 1565 offer a rich trove of insight into many aspects of his particular career but also into the workings of the Republic of Letters more generally. Although Gessner never benefitted from a major patronage relationship and probably received limited financial support from his dedicatees, he nonetheless managed to publish a number of major works on his initiative, including folio volumes of philology, bibliography, and especially expensive works of illustrated natural history. Crucial to Gessner's success was his accumulation of smaller contributions in kind from a wide range of people who offered him hospitality or sent him information and specimens, manuscripts and images, which Gessner used in his publications. Gessner rewarded contributors not only by private expressions of thanks, but also in print, and especially visibly in his dedications. Gessner was also unusual in calling attention to the role of learned printers for his work, by composing dedications to them and by advertising that various of his publications were initiated by requests from printers or bequests of manuscripts by recently deceased scholars. Gessner thus used the high visibility of the printed dedication to invite further contributions from learned readers, bequests of unfinished manuscripts, and proposals from printers with which to fuel his remarkable productivity.
- Matèries
- Història de la ciència
Biografia Documentació Humanisme
- Notes
- Número monogràfic de la revista Archimedes, 50 (2017).
- URL
- https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319 ...
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