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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Patrick M. ValentinePublisher: Scarecrow Press Imprint: Scarecrow Press Dimensions: Width: 15.70cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.472kg ISBN: 9780810885707ISBN 10: 0810885700 Pages: 222 Publication Date: 27 September 2012 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: Written Information and Beyond Chapter I: Early Books: Beginnings to circa 1450 A. Origins of Information Media and Materials B. Writing and Its Effects Interlude: Book Emblems C. Book Formats D. Manuscripts and Copying Chapter II: Early Libraries: Beginnings to circa 1500 A. Ancient Libraries B. Medieval European Libraries Interlude: Early Cataloging C. African, Asian and Pre-Columbian Libraries Chapter III: Books and Printing: 15th – 19th Centuries A. Early Printing and the Invention of Moveable Type B. Printing and Repeatable Messages Interlude: Woodcuts C. Spread of Printing and Incunabula Chapter IV: Libraries Renaissance & Beyond A. European Libraries Renaissance to the Enlightenment B. Modern European Libraries Interlude: Censorship C. Libraries Outside Europe Chapter V: Modern Printing & Computers A. Print in the 19th and 20th Centuries B. Electronics in Communications Interlude: Print Nationalism C. Computers and Books Chapter VI: American Libraries A. American Libraries to World War I B. American Libraries after World War I Interlude: Burning Books C. Computers in American Libraries Bibliography IndexReviewsValentine (East Carolina Univ.) here presents a comprehensive survey of book history and library history from their beginnings to the modern day. Libraries have changed and developed a great deal since ancient times, when most libraries were owned by the wealthy, and relatively few people had access to them. One overriding theme of this volume is how libraries have slowly but steadily become more accessible to the larger, nonelite public. Valentine also discusses the impact of library technological innovations such as the card catalog; it exemplifies something that may seem quaint now, but was a great improvement on older, printed catalogs of books...The last third of the book, which focuses on more modern developments in books, information, and American libraries, is more engaging than previous sections. This volume likely will be most useful to library students and advanced undergraduates in specialized courses. Additionally, library professionals and researchers in related fields may find it helpful. A bibliography is included for those who want to follow up in greater depth. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-level undergraduates and above, especially in library science. CHOICE Valentine (East Carolina Univ.) here presents a comprehensive survey of book history and library history from their beginnings to the modern day. Libraries have changed and developed a great deal since ancient times, when most libraries were owned by the wealthy, and relatively few people had access to them. One overriding theme of this volume is how libraries have slowly but steadily become more accessible to the larger, nonelite public. Valentine also discusses the impact of library technological innovations such as the card catalog; it exemplifies something that may seem quaint now, but was a great improvement on older, printed catalogs of books...The last third of the book, which focuses on more modern developments in books, information, and American libraries, is more engaging than previous sections. This volume likely will be most useful to library students and advanced undergraduates in specialized courses. Additionally, library professionals and researchers in related fields may find it helpful. A bibliography is included for those who want to follow up in greater depth. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-level undergraduates and above, especially in library science. CHOICE Patrick Valentine is an assistant professor in library science, and this book has emerged from a course that he has taught for several years. It covers printing and library history from their beginnings to the present day... It is a competent, concise, easily followed account, well suited to its purpose as an academic text. The Australian Library Journal Students of book and library history will find Valentine's study an indispensible guide that examines how social forces shaped the production and dissemination of written text...[S]tudents will appreciate the first three chapters of Valentine's book, which provide a foundational overview of early approaches to writing and preserving written information...Readers will find the fourth chapter valuable for its treatment of popular public libraries in England and across the European continent...Additionally, readers will find Valentine's historical account of public as well as college and university libraries valuable for what it may tell us about the impact of culture on how information is preserved and accessed. Finally, scholars and students alike not only will benefit greatly from Valentine's thorough and well-written book, but they will find the extensive bibliography similarly useful for further study. Information & Culture As his title suggests, Patrick Valentine, who teaches a course in the general subject area of the book in the graduate library school at East Carolina University in the USA, has taken on a very ambitious project - the more so, as he does not limit himself to Europe and areas of European settlement, but also deals with books and libraries in other parts of the world, particularly east Asia. In some respects his project is made even more ambitious by the fact that he attempts to encompass his topic in only 170 pages of text, including chapter endnotes...[S]enior students and others skilled in reading critically are likely to find it informative, insightful, and entertaining. Australian Academic & Research Libraries Author InformationPatrick M. Valentine is assistant professor of library science at East Carolina University. Valentine is the author of The Rise of a Southern Town: Wilson, North Carolina, 1849-1920 (2002) and The Episcopalians of Wilson County, 1856-1995 (1996). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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