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008 091207s2005 xx 000 u eng d
035 _a(OCoLC)ocn474733664
040 _aDKDLA
_bdan
_cDKDLA
020 _a0521845432
020 _a9780521845434
020 _a0521607744 (m)
020 _a9780521607742 (m)
029 0 _aDKDLA
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029 1 _aDKDLA
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029 1 _aDKDLA
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035 _a(OCoLC)474733664
050 1 4 _aZ 124
_bE36p 2005
082 0 0 _a741.2
049 _aGRAL
100 1 _aEisenstein, Elizabeth L.
245 1 4 _aThe printing revolution early modern Europe.
250 _a2. ed.
260 _aCambridge :
_bCambridge University Press,
_c2005.
300 _a384 s.
505 0 _aPart I. The Emergence of Print Culture in the West: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 / 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 -- revisiting the printing revolution.
520 8 _aAlthough the importance of the advent of printing for the Western world has long been recognized, it was Elizabeth Eisenstein, in her monumental, two-volume work, The Printing Press as an Agent of Change, who provided the first full-scale treatment of the subject. This edition gives a stimulating survey of the communications revolution of the fifteenth century. After summarizing the initial changes introduce by the establishment of printing shops, it goes on to discuss how printing effected three major cultural movements:.
650 4 _aPrimera Jornada de Catalogacion.
650 4 _aImprenta
_xHistoria
_zEuropa.
650 4 _aTecnología y civilización.
650 4 _aCivilización moderna.
650 0 _aPrinting
_zEurope
_xHistory.
650 0 _aTechnology and civilization.
651 0 _aEurope
_xIntellectual life.
942 _2lcc
_cbk
946 _aRCH
994 _aC0
_bDRFGD
999 _c104815
_d104815