Due Feb. 15 | Early Modern Print Culture Conference, Princeton, May 1
PRACTICES, RELATIONSHIPS, AND CIRCULATION
Call for papers
Princeton University, Program in Renaissance and Early Modern Studies
Graduate Student Conference
May 1, 2015
The emergence of print culture in the early modern era altered the relationship between readers and texts. We are interested in exploring the history of the book and material culture, especially insofar as it interacts with concurrent developments in trade, commerce, geographical exploration, and imperialist expansion.
Possible topics can include, but are not limited to:
• print production: technical advances, print culture, materiality of texts
• reading practices: ways of reading, reading public, oral/manuscript/print transmission, book ownership
• circulation: borrowing/lending books, book trade, globalization of knowledge, development of ideas about the world
• books and memory: archives, libraries, authorship, permanence and ephemerality
• the market for books: translations, economic relations, censorship, production of genres, intended audiences (printing and publishing industry/trade)