Called “Reading” till 7/24/2010 and then changed to “18c r



Yüklə 1,78 Mb.
səhifə7/35
tarix22.07.2018
ölçüsü1,78 Mb.
#58006
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   ...   35

Brayman Hackel, Heidi. “Popular Literacy and Society.” Pp. 88-100 of The Oxford History of Popular Print Culture. Vol. 1: Cheap Print in Britain and Ireland to 1660. Edited by Joad Raymond. Oxford: Oxford U. Press, 2011. Pp. xxix + 672; illus. [With an introduction by the editor, “The Origins of Popular Print Culture” (1-14). The volume’s contents are fully surveyed by William Baker in “Bibliography and Textual Criticism” within Years Work in English Studies, 93 (for 2012 [2014]).]

Brayman Hackel, Heidi. Reading Material in Early Modern England: Print, Gender, and Literacy. Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, 2005. Pp. xii + 334; annotated catalogue of Bridgewater library; illus.; index. [Looks for evidence of reading habits (ownership, annotations, etc.) by a wide spectrum of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century readers, particularly women (Frances Egerton, Countess of Bridgewater and Anne Clifford) and new readers. Hackel shows that women participated in "networks of literary production and exchange." Rev. by Lisa Beauchamp in Seventeenth-Century News, 64 (2006), 50-54; (favorably, with objection to length preparatory material) by Maureen Bell in TLS (November 18, 2005), 32; by Phyllis R. Brown in Renaissance Quarterly, 59 (2006), 274-75; by Cathy Conder in Women's Studies, 34, no. 7 (2005), 611-15; by Juliet Fleming in Modern Philology, 104 (2006), 229-38; by Tom Lockwood in Library, 7th series, 7 (2006), 97-99; by Joad Raymond in SHARP News, 15, no. 4 (2006), 13-14; and by Fred Schurink in Notes and Queries, n.s. 52 (2006), 233-34.]

Brayman Hackel, Heidi, and Catherine E. Kelly (eds.). Reading Women: Literacy, Authorship, and Culture in the Atlantic World, 1500-1800. Philadelphia: U. of Pennsylvania Press, 2007. Pp. 264; 11 illustrations. [Rev. by Mary C. Carruth in Textual Cultures: Texts, Contexts, Interpretations, 4, no.1 (Spring 2009), 163-66; by Teresa Toulouse in Early American Literature, 44 (2009), 195-213.]

Breckbill, Anita Stoltzfus, and Carole Goebes. “Music Circulating Libraries in [19C] France: An Overview and a Preliminary List.” Notes, 2nd ser., 63, no. 4 (June 2007), 761-97.

Brenner, Horst. “Die Meistersinger-Sammlung der Stadtbibliothek und das Repertorium der Sangsprüche und Meisterlieder des 12. bis 18. Jahrhunderts.” Pp. 197-204 in 642 Jahre Stadtbibliothek Nürnberg von der Ratsbibliothek zum Bildungcampus. (Beiträge zur Geschichte Kultur der Stadt Nürnberg / Stadtbibliothek Nürnberg, 26.) Edited by Christine Sauer. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2013.

Brewer, David A., and Angus Whitehead. “The Books of Lydia Languish’s Circulating Library Revisited.” Notes and Queries, n.s. 57 [255] (2010), 551-53. [Languish is a fictional character in Richard Brinsley Sheridan’s The Rivals (1775).]

Brewer, John. "Cultural Consumption in Eighteenth-Century England: The View of the Readers." Pp. 366-91 of Frühe Neuzeit--Frühe Moderne? Forschungen zur Vielschichtigkeit von Übergangsprozessen. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1992.

Brewer, John. Pleasures of the Imagination: English Culture in the Eighteenth Century. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giraux, c. 1998. Pp. xxx + 721; bibliography [667-91]; index; plates (some in color). [One chapter is entitled "Readers and the Reading Public" (141-64)--others treat authorship and publication, book collecting, and Thomas Bewick. Rev. by Heather McPherson in Eighteenth-Century Studies, 31 (1998), 541-43; (fav.) by James A. Winn in William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., 55 (1998), 611-13.]

Brewer, John, and Roy Porter (eds.) Consumption and the World of Goods. London: Routledge, 1993. Pp. xix + 564 + [64] plates; illus.; index; maps. [Contains David Cressy's "Literacy in Context: Meaning and Measurement in Early Modern England" (305-19); Patricia Cline Cohen's "Reckoning with Commerce: Numeracy in Eighteenth-Century America" (320-34); John Money's "Teaching in the Market-Place, or 'Caesar adsum jam forte: Pompey aderat': The Retailing of Knowledge in Provincial England during the Eighteenth Century," a lengthy examination of the memoir of excise clerk turned charity school teacher John Cannon, where he finds many details on literacy and reading habits (335-77; tables on mathematics practice and writing); Iaroslav Isaievych's "The Book Trade in Eastern Europe in the Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth Centuries" (381-92); and C. Y. Ferdinand's "Selling It to the Provinces: News and Commerce round Eighteenth-Century Salisbury" (393-411).]

Breymayer, Reinhard. "Der 'Vater des deutschen Pietismus' und seine Bucher: Zur Privatbibliothek Philipp Jacob Speners (1635-1705)." Pp. 299-332 in Bibliothecae selectae da Cusano a Leopardi. Edited by Eugenio Canone. Florence: L. Olschki, 1993.

Breymayer, Reinhard. Zum Schicksal der Privatbibliothek August Hermann Franckes [1663-1727]. Über den wiedergefundenen Auktionskatalog der Privatbibliothek seines Sohnes Gotthilf August Francke [1696-1769]. (Internationalen Kongress für Pietismusforschung Halle (Salle), 28. August bis 1. September 2001.) Tübingen: Noûs-Verlag Thomas Leon Heck, 2001. Pp. 32.

Brietzke, Dirk. “Die Hamburger Commerzbibliothek zwischen Ökonomie und Aufklärung.” Das Achtzehnte Jahrhundert, 32, no. 2 (2008), 240-54.

Briggs, Julia. “’Delightful Task!’: Women, Children, and Reading in the Mid-Eighteenth Century.” Pp. 67-82 in Culturing the Child, 1690-1914: Essays in Memory of Mitzi Myers. Edited by Donelle Ruwe. Lanham: Scarecrow, in association with Children’s Literature Association, 2005. Pp. xiv + 266.

Brinker von der Heyde, Claudia (ed.). Frühneuzeitliche Bibliotheken als Zentren des europäischen Kulturtransfers. Stuttgart: Hirzel, 2014. Pp. 284; illustrations. [Essays on 17C and 18C inter-cultural communication, intellectual life, and libraries. These include Gabriele Ball, “Das Inventar der Gräfin Anna Sophia von Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt als Spiegel eines fürstlichen Netzwerks im 17. Jahrhundert” (77-94); Friedhelm Brusniak, “’Von Besuchung der ‘publiquen’ und ‘privat-Bibliotheqen’: Die Empfehlungen des fürstlich waldeckischen Hofmeisters Joachim Christoph Nemeitz (1679-1753) an ‘Reisende von Condition’. Ein Beitrag aus musiksoziologischer Perpektive” (105-12); Václav, Bok, “Die Schlossbibliothek von Cesky Krumlov/Krumau zwischen den 20er-Jahren des 17. und der Mitte der 19. Jahrhunderts” (95-104).]

Brockliss, Laurence W. B. Calvet's Web: Enlightenment and the Republic of Letters in Eighteenth-Century France. New York: Oxford U. Press, 2002. Pp. xiv + 471 + [12] of plates; graphs; illus.; maps. [On Esprit Claude-François Calvet (1728-1810), a doctor, natural historian, antiquary in Avignon, and his participation in the larger Republic of Letters through reading, friendships, and especially correspondence (much use is made of his considerable archive). Rev. (favorably with reservations about larger arguments regarding the relation of the Enlightenment participants to those in the Republic of Letters) by Anne Goldgar in TLS (January 3, 2003), 29-30; by James Livesey in British Journal for the History of Science, 38 (2005), 109-10.]

Brockman, Bennet A. “The Juvenile Audiences of Sir Orfeo.” Children’s Literature Association Quarterly, 10, no. 1 (Spring 1985), 18-20. [ Part of an appreciative or memorial forum on “The Canon of Historical Children’s Literature for Warren W. Wooden,” introduced by Jeanie Watson (17), on British children’s literature before the late eighteenth century.]

Brooks, Joanna. "The Early American Public Sphere and the Emergence of a Black Print Counterpublic." William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series, 62 (2005), 67-92.

Brooks, Jeanice. “Musical Monuments for the Country House: Music, Collection, and Display at Tatton Park.” Music and Letters, 91 (2010), 513-35. [On book acquisition and display c. 1800 in women’s collections, focused on the library and music room at Tatton Park, Cheshire.]

Brooks, Joanna. “Learning to Read--Almost: New Books in Early Native American Studies” [review essay]. Early American Literature, 48 (2013), 743-54.

Brossard, Yolande de. La Collection Sébastien de Brossard, 1655-1730. Paris: Bibliothèque nationale de France, 1994. Pp. 539. [The collection is in the BN, Paris.]

Broszinski, Hartmut. “Die Altbestände der Landesbibliothek und der Murhadschen Bibliothek der Stadt Kassel.” Bibliothek und Wissenschaft, 26 (1992), 55-64.

Brouard-Arends, Isabelle, and Marie-Emmanuelle Plagnol-Dièval (eds.). Femmes èducatrices au Siècle des Lumières. (Interférences.) Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2007. Pp. 390.

Brouwer, Han. "Lesekulturforschung in den Niederlanden: Buchhandel und Lesepublikum im 18. und 19. Jahrhundert." Wolfenbütteler Notizien zur Buchgeschichte, 17 (1992), 177-89.

Brouwer, Han. Lezen en schrijven in de provincie: De boeken van Zwolse boekverkopers, 1777-1849. Leiden: Primavera, 1995. Pp. 360; illus; summary in English. [Revised Ph.D. thesis.]

Brouwer, Han. "Lezen in de Provincie: Zwolle in de late Achttiende en Negentiende Eeuw." Pp. 127-34 of Balans en Perspectief van de Nederlanse Cultuurgeschiedenis: De productie, distributie, en consumptie van cultuur. Edited by J. J. Kloek and W. W. Mijnhardt. Amersterdam: Rodopi, 1991.

Brouwer, Han. "Wordt er te Zwolle Veel Gelezen? Leescultuur in de late 18de en 19de Eeuw." Spiegel Historiael, 26 (1991), 143-48; illus. Libraries & Culture, 25, no. 1 (1990), 80-85.

Brown, Barbara Taylor. “Library History Research in Ireland: 1918-1968.” Libraries & Culture, 25, no. 1 (1990), 86-102. [In an issue with surveys of 20C research on library history in diverse countries, edited by Paul Kaegbein and Paul Sturges, papers from a symposium April 1998 at the Herzog August Bibliothek on “Library History Research in the International Context.”]

Brown, Candy Gunther. The Word in the World: Evangelical Writing, Publishing and Reading in America, 1789-1880. Chapel Hill: U. of North Carolina Press, 2004. Pp. xiv + 336; illus. [Rev. by Susanna Ashton in SHARP News, 14, nos. 1-2 (Winter & Spring 2005), 11-12; (with other books) by Renee Bergland in American Literature, 77 (2005), 850-52; by Robert Brown in the Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 37 (2006), 302-33; by Edward R. Crowther in Journal of the Early Republic, 25 (2005), 310-12; by Paul Harvey in American Historical Review, 110 (2005), 139-41; (fav.) by Jonathan D. Sassi in The Book [Newsletter of the American Antiquarian Society], no. 63 (July 2004), 8-9; by Beth Barton Schweiger in Journal of Southern History, 71 (2005), 432-33.]

Brown, Diane. “Private Lessons: Mentors and the Anxiety of Education in Eighteenth-Century French Literature.” Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard U., 2001. Dissertation Abstracts International, 62A, no. 4 (2001), 1430.

Brown, Iain Gordon. Building for Books: The Architectural Evolution of the Advocates' Library, 1689-1925. Aberdeen: Aberdeen U. Press in asso. with the National Library of Scotland, 1989. Pp. xx + 273; illus.; maps; plans; portraits. [Rev. (favorably) by Thomas A. Markus in Scottish Historical Review, 70 (1991), 89-90; by P. S. Morrish in Library History, 8, no. 5 (1990), 153-55; (favorably; with another book) by F. W. Ratcliffe in Library, 6th ser., 13 (1991), 176-182; by E. M. Rodger in Journal of the Society of Archivists, 11 (1990), 61-62; (with another book) by Priscilla Schlicke in The Scottish Literary Journal, 34 (1991), 24-27; (with another book) by Harry Gordon Slade in TLS (March 2, 1991), 232.

Brown, Matthew P. The Pilgrim and the Bee: Reading Rituals and Book Culture in Early New England. (Material Texts.) Philadelphia: U. of Pennsylvania Press, 2007. Pp. xiv + 265; bibliography; 20 illustrations; index. [With five chapters: “The Presence of the Text”; “Devotional Steady Sellers and the Conduct of Reading”; “Ritual Fasting”; “Ritual Mourning”; and “Race, Literacy, and the Eliot Mission.” Rev. by Charles E. Clark in SHARP News, 17, no. 1 (Winter 2008), 7-8; by Paul Gutjahr in American Historical Review, 113 (2008), 817-18; Jennifer Mylander in Early American Literature, 43 (2008), 516-19; by Peter P. Reed (with another book) in a review article (“Book Objects, Archives, and Ritual Repertories in Colonial New England”) in Textual Cultures, 4, no. 1 (Spring 2009), 148-50; by Doreen Alvarez Saar in the Rocky Mountain E-Review, 62, no. 2 (2008); by Peter West in American Literature, 80 (2008), 821-23.]

Brown, Richard D. Knowledge is Power: The Diffusion of Information in Early America, 1700-1865. Oxford: Oxford U. Press, 1989. Pp. xii + 372; illus.; maps. [Rev. by Joseph F. Kett in Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 114 (1990), 565-67; by Haynes McMullen in Library Quarterly, 60 (1990), 257-58; (with another book) by James D. Wallace in New England Quarterly, 63 (1990), 484-87.]

Brown, Roger L. "Spiritual Nurseries: Griffith Jones and the Circulating Schools." Cylchgrawn . . . National Library of Wales Journal, 30, no. 1 (Summer 1997), 27-50.



Brown, Stephen W., and Warren McDougall (eds.). The Edinburgh History of the Book. Volume 2: Enlightenment and Expansion, 1707-1800. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2012. Pp. xxii + 666 + [41] plates (between pp. 74/75 and 202/203); bibliography [617-49]; chronology; 101 illustrations (60 in color); index; 15 tables.[ Volume 1 (to the Act of Union, 1707, is anticipated in 2017; Vol. 3, Ambition and Industry, 1800-1880, ed. by Bill Bell, appeared in 2007. Following the editors’ introduction (1-22), the volume is divided up into six sections, oddly called “chapters” since they contain many essays, and a few of these six sections contain a hodgepodge with essays outside the announced scope, and all but the final chapter contain essays with relevance to “reading”: Chapter 1 is entitled “The Emergence of the Modern Trade” (23-117), but is not principally about the development of Scottish print trade (Chapter 2 on “Developing a Marketplace for Books” [118-200] has that focus.). Chapter 5 is called “Publishing the Enlightenment” (421-542), but it is divided between readers (the critical reader, women readers, etc) and types of publications (as sermons, novels, and agricultural works Chapter 4, “The Popular Press and the Public Reader” (287-420) mostly focuses on classes of readers and libraries, but it concludes with a few additional essays on genres. Chapter 3 is well described as involving essays on “Intellectual Exchanges and Scottish Authors Abroad” (203-86). The contents include the following relevant essays in Chapters 3-5: Esther Mijers, “The Scottish-Dutch Trade” (203-09); Thomas Ahnert, “Scottish Authors in Germany” (210-13); S. W. Brown, “Making a Scottish Market for French Books” (214-20); Gilles Robel, “Hume’s Political Discourses in France” (221-32); Iain Gordon Brown, “Scotland and Italy: Books and the Grand Tour” (233-45); Howard Gaskill, “Ossian in Europe” (246-53); Beatrice Teissier, both “Russia” and “Asia” (254-57 and 258-67); McDougall, “America” (268-74; Terrence O. Moore, “The American Founders and Scottish Books” (275-82); Fiona A. Black, “Canada” (283-86); [in Chapter 4:] Alexander Murdoch “Literacy” (287-96); Matthew D. Eddy, “Natural History, Natural Philosophy, and Readers” (297-309); Terrence O. Moore, “Textbooks” (210-14); Roger L. Emerson, “Reading in the Universities” (315-22); Murray C. T. Simpson, both “Institutional Libraries” and “Private Libraries” (323-30 and 331-36); K. A. Manley, “Subscription and Circulating Libraries” (337-52); S. W. Brown, “Newspapers and Magazines” (353-68); Martin Moonie, “Edinburgh v. the Advertiser: A Case Study” (369-71); John Scally, “Cheap Print on Scottish Streets” (372-81); Iain Beavan, “The Pamphlet” (382-89); Gordon Pentland, “The Pamphlet War in the 1790s” (390-98); Heather Holmes, “Agricultural Pamphlets” (399-406); Catherine Brown, “Cookery Books” (407-11); Brian Alderson, “Children’s Books” (412-20); [in Chapter 5:] Mark Towsey, three essays: “Reading the Scottish Enlightenment,” “The ‘Age of Criticism’ and the Critical Reader: George Ridpath,” and “Women’s Reading” (421-34, 435-37, and 438-46); Murray C. T. Simpson, “A Woman’s Library in 1729: Grisel Erskine” (447-58); Ann Matheson, both “Religion” and “Hugh Blair’s Sermons” (459-70 and 471-74); Peter Garside, “The Novel” (475-85); Richard Sher, “Adam Smith and Scottish Books on Political Economy” 486-93); Fiona Macdonald, “Medicine” (494-502); and Heather Holmes, “Agricultural Publishing” (503-09); Iain G. Brown on archaeological publications; David Shuttleton, “The Journalistic Life: Thomas Blacklock” (528-37); and S. W. Brown and McDougall on “The Encyclopedia Britannica” (538-44). Rev. (favorably) by Joseph Marshall in Library and Information History, 29 (2013), 61-63; by David McKitterick in Library, 7th ser., 13 (2012), 349-50.]

Brown, Sylvia, and John Considine. The Spacious Margin: Eighteenth-Century Printed Books and their Traces of their Readers. Edmonton: University of Alberta Press, 2012. Pp. 118. [Catalogue for an exhibition at the Bruce Peel Special Collections Library, University of Alberta, held October 2012 to February 2013.]

Brown, Sylvia, and John Considine, with Annie Shirkie. Marginated: Seventeenth-Century Printed Books and the Traces of Their Readers. Designed by Alan Brownoff. Edmonton, Alberta: Bruce Peel Special Collections Library, University of Alberta, 2010. Pp. ix + 161; catagloue of an exhibition held in April 2010; 75 illustrations (in color); map.

Brown, Sylvia, and John Considine, with Annie Shirkie. Seventeenth-Century Printed Books and the Traces of Their Readers. Designed by Alan Brownoff. Edmonton, Alberta: Bruce Peel Special Collections Library, University of Alberta, 2010. Pp. 162; 75 illustrations (in color).

Bruce, Robert J., and Harry Diack Johnstone. “A Catalogue of the Truly Valuable and Curious Library of Music Late in the Possession of Dr. William Boyce (1779): Transcription and Commentary.” Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle, 43 (2010), 111-71.

Brundin, Abigail. “Book-Buying and the Grand Tour: The Italian Books at Belton House in Lincolnshire.” Library, 7th series, 16, no. 1 (2015), 57-79.

Brüning, Jens, and Ulrike Gleixner (eds.). Das Athen der Welfen: Die Reformuniversität Helmstedt, 1576-1810. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2010. Pp. 328. [With essays on the university, closed c. 1810, with its books acquired by the Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel (this volume was produced on the occasion of an exhibition at that library on the acquired books). The essays include Ulrich Kopp’s “Eine Bibliothek an der Kette: Zur Vorgeschichte der Helmstedter Universitätsbibliothek” Werner Arnold’s “Universitätsbibliothek und Professorenbibliotheken”; and Ute Maria Etzold’s “Helmstedt im Druck: Universitätsbuchdrucker und Universitätsbuchbinder.” Rev. by John L. Flood in Library, 7th series, 11 (2010), 360.]

Brüning, Jochen, and Friedrich Niewöhner (eds.). Augsburg: Augsburg in der Frühen Neuzeit: Beiträge zu einem Forschungsprogramm. Berlin: Akademie, 1995. Pp. 444. [With diverse essays on cultural exchange treating the history of the book and the importance of libraries, as K. Conermann's "Oettingische Bücherlust im 17. und frühen 18 Jahrhundert: Regionale Rezeptions- und Literaturgeschichte im Spiegel von Bibliotheken" (252-331), and W. D. Otte's, J. Bepler's, and W. Arnold's essays on Augsburg's relations with the Wolfenbüttel library.]

Brunken, Otto. "The Novel as Controversial Reading Material for Young People in the Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Centuries." Phaedrus, 13 (1988), 40-48; illus.

Brusegan, Marcello, Paolo Eleuteri, and Gianfranco Fiaccadori (eds.). San Michele in Isola: Isola della conoscenza. Ottocento anni di storia e cultura camaldolesi nella laguna di Venezia. Mostra organizzata in occasione del millenario della fondazione della Congregazione camaldolese. Torino: UTET, 2012. Pp. xxvi + 406; catalogue; illustrations in color. [Contributions include Carlo Campana’s account of the eighteenth-century Venetian scholar “Jacopo Morelli” (217-21); Paolo Eleuteri’s “La biblioteca” (213-16); Francesca Cavazzana Romanelli and Erilde Terenzoni’s “Archivi camaldolesi, Camaldolesi archivisti: Da San Michele e San Mattia alla Terraferma veneta” (145-63); and Stefano Trovato’s “Morelli e la selezione di libri da San Michele e altre biblioteche monastiche soppresse nel 1810” (228-39). Rev. by Alessandro Ledda in L’Almanacco bibliografico, no. 24 (December 2012), 7-8.]

Brusniak, Friedhelm. “’Von Besuchung der “Publiquen” und “Privat”-Bibliotheken’: Die Empfehlungen des Fürstlich Waldeckischen Hofmeisters Joachim Christop Nemeitz (1679-1763), An ‘Risend von Condition’: Ein Beitrag aus musiksoziologischer Perspektive.” Pp. 105-11 in Frühneuzeitliche Bibliotheken als Zentren des europäischen Kulturtransfers. Edited by Claudia Beinder von der Heyde, Marie Isabelle Vogel, and Jürge Wolf. Stuttgart: Hirzel, 2014. Pp. 281.

Bryden, D. J., and D. L. Simms. "Spectacles Improved to Perfection and Approved by the Royal Society." Annals of Science, 50 (1993), 1-32. [On the new grinding method developed by John Marshall of London.]

Bygrave, Stephen. Uses of Education: Readings in Enlightenment England. (Bucknell Studies in Eighteenth-Century Literature and Culture.) Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell U. Press, 2009. Pp. 238.

Buchanan-Brown, John. "Bibliography in the Seventeenth Century." Quadrat. No. 7 (June 1998), 3-8.

Buchberger, Reinhard. “Die Buchhandlung Stahel (Würzburg/Wien) und die Bücherkataloge des 18. Jahrhunderts. Erste Forschungen in einem Sammelbestand der Wienbibliothek.” Das Achtzehnte Jahrhundert und Österreich, 28 (2013), 13-25.

Bücher, Menschen und Kulturen: Festschrift für Hans-Peter Geh zum 65. Geburtstag. Edited by Birigit Schneider, Felix Heinzer, and Vera Trost. Munich: Saur, 1999. Pp. xxxi + 432; illus. [Includes essays gathered under such headings as "Die Württembergische Landesbibliothek Geschichte und Bestände," "Aus der Bibliotheksarbeit in Baden-Württemberg," and "Kulturgut Buch: Sammlung und Präsentation." Among essays in the last are Walter Neuhauser's "Am Anfang stand die Bibliotheca publica (Oenipontana): Zur Entstehung des staatlichen Bibliothekswesens in Österreich im 18. Jahrhundert" (188-205), and Franz George Kaltwasser's "'Bibliothekguckerey': Die königliche Hof-und Staatsbibliothek in München als Sehenswürdigkeit im späten 18. und im 19. Jahrhundert" (206-13). Other sections involve regional and international bibliographic control and the innovations likely in the twenty-first century.]

Buchmayr, Friedrich. "Eine Bücherschenkung an die Stiftsbibliothek St. Florian aus dem 18. Jahrhundert." Jahrbuch des Wiener Goethe-Vereins, 99 (1995), 159-73.

Buchwald-Pelcowa, Paulina. “Biblioteka Nieswieska Radziwiłłów: Fakty, watpliwosci, pytania.” Rocznik Biblioteki Narodowej, 41 (2011), 7-30.

Bufalini, Delio. “Editoria bolognese del Settecento nella Biblioteca dell’Archiginnasio.” Pp. 443-54 in Testo e immagine nell’editoria del Settecento: Atti del Convegno Internationale, Roma, 26-28 febbraio 2007. (Biblioteca di “Paratesto,” 4.) Ed. by Marco Santoro and Valentina Sestini Rome: Fabrizio Serra, 2008.

Bullard, Paddy. “What Swift Did in Libraries.” Pp. 65-84 100 in Jonathan Swift and the Eighteenth-Century Book. Edited by Paddy Bullard and James McLaverty. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013. Pp. xii + 291; illustrations; index.

Burger, Pierre-François. "Jean-Louis Asselin [1772-1822], agent consulaire et collectionneur de manuscrits orientaux." Dix-huitième siècle, 28 (1996), 125-34.


Yüklə 1,78 Mb.

Dostları ilə paylaş:
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   ...   35




Verilənlər bazası müəlliflik hüququ ilə müdafiə olunur ©genderi.org 2024
rəhbərliyinə müraciət

    Ana səhifə