Aan de slag met de collectie:
Geen omslagfoto beschikbaar
Kingdoms of memory, empires of ink: the Veda and the regional print cultures of colonial India
Door
Uittreksel
"The backbone of this book on books is a history of a most unusual concept of the book that developed in South Asia with reference to the Veda… By the 19th century, regional cultures of print showed an uneven and spatially discontinuous development across the Indian subcontinent. They variously fed on regional patterns of communication, configurations of power, patronage, and a new economic regime. Their development formed part of tremendous transformations in the structures of power, statecraft, authority, and communication that the subcontinent was going through while being gradually absorbed into the globalizing orbit of the emerging British Empire. The period witnessed a general shift of knowledge-production sites and relocation of distribution and text-circulation networks towards new urban centres…. This book tries to understand how the emerging regional cultures of print created conditions for, inspired, and accommodated differently configured projects of bringing out printed editions of Vedic texts while leaving distinct traces of their respective nature on their editorial principles, book format, typographic form, and publishing ideology."-- Provided by publisher.
Uitgever
Uitgave
Krakow: Jagiellonian University Press, 2020
Jaar
Gaat over
Onderwerp
Type
Taal
Classificatie
ISBN
- 9788323343912
- 8323343918
Duurzaam webadres
Als u naar dit object wilt verwijzen, gebruik dan de duurzame URL: