As the first book-length examination of the role of German print culture in mediating Europe's knowledge of the newly discovered people of Africa, South Asia, and the Americas, this work highlights a unique and early incident of visual accuracy and an unprecedented investment in the practice of ethnography.
1. Comparative Print Culture and Alternative Literary Modernities: A Critical Introduction to Frameworks and Case Studies. - Rasoul Aliakbari -- 2. Song Dynasty Classicism and Eleventh-Century "Print Modernity" in China. - Daniel Fried -- 3. Alternative Imaginaries of the Modern Girl: A Comparative Examination of Canadian and Australian Magazines. - Victoria Kuttainen and Jilly Lippmann -- 4. The Making of a National Hero: A Comparative Examination of Köroğlu the Bandit. - Judith M. Wilks -- 5. Between Poetry and Reportage: Raúl González Tuñón, Journalism, and Literary Modernization in 1930s Argentina. - Geraldine Rogers -- 6. New Fiction as a Medium of Public Opinion: The Utopian/Dystopian Imagination in Revolutionary Periodicals in Late Qing China. - Shuk Man Leung -- 7. Nineteenth-Century African American Publications on Food and Housekeeping: Negotiating Alternative Forms of Modernity. - Hélène Le Dantec-Lowry -- 8. Progressing with A Vengeance: The Woman Reader/Writer in the African Press. - Corinne Sandwith -- 9. Fashioning the Self: Women and Transnational Print Networks in Colonial Punjab. - Arti Minocha -- 10. Crafting the Modern Word: Writing, Publishing, and Modernity in the Print Culture of Prewar Japan. - Andrew T. Kamei-Dyche -- 11. "Books for Men": Pornography and Literary Modernity in Late Nineteenth-Century Brazil. - Leonardo P. Mendes -- 12. Print Culture and the Reassertion of Indigenous Nationhood in Early-Mid-Twentieth Century Canada. - Brendan Frederick R. Edwards. .
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Sundanese books have been printed since 1850 up to the present. This article tries to draw a configuration of printing books in Sundanese for about 100 years in the Dutch colonial and Japanese occupation period. Printing and publishing books in Sundanese was initiated by the Dutch colonial government for the sake of management of their colony. This article discuss three aspects in print culture in Sundanese: (1) the role of government printing house and private publishers, (2) the cultural relationship between manuscript and printed books (3) the changes after the emergence of printed books. Print culture in the Sundanese-speaking community was born and has developed. Its facets have changed from time to time. We notice more than 2200 Sundanese books were published up to the second decade of the 21st century when the technological innovation has proceeded in an enormous pace. However, the importance of Sundanese publication has not diminished in terms of nurturing educated citizens in this digital-oriented society and supporting cultural identity.
Representing the public sphere : the new journalism and its historians / Mark Hampton -- Staging the public sphere : magazine dialogism and the prosthetics of authorship at the turn of the twentieth century / Ann Ardis -- Transatlantic print culture : the Anglo-American feminist press and emerging "modernities" / Lucy Delap and Maria DiCenzo -- Feminist things / Barbara Green -- Philanthropy and transatlantic print culture / Francesca Sawaya -- John O'London's weekly and the modern author / Patrick Collier -- "Women are news" : British women's magazines, 1919-1939 / Fiona Hackney -- Christopher Morley's Kitty Foyle : (em)bedded in print / Margaret D. Stetz -- Journalism and modernism, continued : the case of W.T. Stead / Laurel Brake -- Journalism, modernity, and the globe-trotting girl reporter / Jean Marie Lutes -- The fine art of cheap print : turn-of-the-century American little magazines / Kirsten MacLeod -- The newspaper response to Tender buttons, and what it might mean / Leonard Diepeveen -- Modernist periodicals and pedagogy : an experiment in collaboration / Suzanne W. Churchill
The significant changes in the social, economic, and political conditions of Iran in the late Qajar era both precipitated and necessitated changes in cultural production. One way to better understand these shifting paradigms is through an examination of print culture. ᶜAbbas Mirza, the governor of Azerbaijan and a Qajar prince, has been credited with promoting and supporting the printing industry in Iran. In 1812, he oversaw the establishment of a printing house in Tabriz, and it was largely due to his influence that Tabriz became an important center of publishing. Jan Rypka noted that the first "printing business" in Iran was set up in Tabriz in the year 1824-25 but he believed the press to have been operational for only a decade before lithography overtook the printing enterprise. ᶜAbbas Mirza sent a group of students to England to study, the most notable being Mirza Salih Shirazi who was a student at Oxford University.
"Rewriting Citizenship is a cultural history that reveals how race and gender influenced nineteenth-century citizenship. By focusing on "domestic literature"-cookbooks, novels, household manuals, newspapers, magazines, sermons, and even diaries-Susan J. Stanfield finds that women imbued the quotidian with "civic purpose." Indeed, it was more than the social reformers and political activists who argued that women should have a role in government. Because many of these women saw their civic status as "different"-though not necessarily inferior to-that of men, they made forays into the public sphere through print culture. In Stanfield's estimation, this helped women fulfill culturally constructed ideas of femininity-maintaining the "authority of their womanhood"-while they also actively redefined citizenship by linking their domestic work to nation building. Unsurprisingly, middle-class white women sought to differentiate themselves from immigrants, the working poor, and women of color by distinguishing between household labor and household management. But middle-class African American women also used the "politics of respectability" to enhance their own status. Like their white counterparts, these women argued that their well-ordered homes proved that their husbands and father were patriarchs and were therefore worthy of citizenship and the vote"--
"In the middle of nineteenth century, as Americans contended with rapid industrial and technological change, readers relied on periodicals and books for information about their changing world. Within this print culture, a host of writers, editors, architects, and reformers urged men to commute to and from their jobs in the city, which was commonly associated with overcrowding, disease, and expense. Through a range of materials, from pattern books to novels and a variety of periodicals, men were told of the restorative effects on body and soul of the natural environment, found in the emerging suburbs outside cities such as New York, Boston, and Philadelphia. They were assured that the promise of an ideal home, despite its association with women's work, could help to motivate them to engage in the labor and commute that took them away from it each day. In Suburban Plots, Maura D'Amore explores how Henry David Thoreau, Henry Ward Beecher, Donald Grant Mitchell, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Nathaniel Parker Willis, and others utilized the pen to plot opportunities for a new sort of male agency grounded, literarily and spatially, in a suburbanized domestic landscape. D'Amore uncovers surprising narratives that do not fit easily into standard critical accounts of midcentury home life. Taking men out of work spaces and locating them in the domestic sphere, these writers were involved in a complex process of portraying men struggling to fulfill fantasies outside of their professional lives, in newly emerging communities. These representations established the groundwork for popular conceptions of suburban domestic life that remain today" --
1. Introduction: Print Culture, Agency, Regionality -- Part I: Yorkshire -- 2. Printed by Alice Broade: The Career of York's First Female Printer, 1661–1680 -- 3. Historiography, Regionality, and Print Trade Life Writing: The Case of Mr Thomas Gent, Printer, of York -- 4. The Newspaper, the Bookshop, and the Radical Society: Joseph Gales' Hartshead Press and the 'Reading and Thinking People of Sheffield' -- Part II: Circulation and Networks -- 5. Printing, Publishing, and Pocket Book Compiling: Ann Fisher's Hidden Labour in the Newcastle Book Trade -- 6. Elizabeth Davison and the Circulation of Chapbooks in Early Nineteenth-Century Northumberland -- Part III: Regions and Nations -- 7. 'The Privilege Granted to the Printer': The Role of James VI in the Scottish Print Trade 1567–1603 -- 8. Print Agency and Civic Press Identity Across the Border: Commerce and Regional Improvement in the Glasgow Advertiser, Liverpool General Advertiser, and the Urban Directories of Liverpool and Glasgow, 1765–1795 -- Part IV: Technology -- 9. For Lack of Letters: Early Typographical Shibboleths of English and Other Foreign Languages -- 10. A New Type: Sans Serif Typography and Midlands Regional Identity -- 11. Afterword.
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In: Forster , L C 2016 , ' Spreading the word : feminist print cultures and the women's liberation movement ' Women's History Review , vol 25 , no. 5 , pp. 812-831 . DOI:10.1080/09612025.2015.1132878
This article investigates the significance of print cultures to women of the second wave of feminism. It takes a broad view of a male-dominated publishing industry and highlights the various ways that women intervened and responded through their writing, publishing and organisational skills and political commitment. It discusses the shifts in female publishing cultures, emboldened by the overarching Women's Liberation Movement and empowered through the establishment of separatist networks. Feminist activism, I argue, may be discerned in the impetus behind the construction and publication of feminist magazines. The last section considers the different publishing hinterlands of three feminist magazines, overlapping in their concerns, but distinctive in their approaches: Shrew, Spare Rib and Womens Voice, and argues that such magazines of the second wave represent the diversity and print activism of the WLM.