Locher's and Grüninger's edition of Horace from Strasbourg 1498: At the crossroads between printed and manuscript book production and use

This contribution aims to exemplify through a case study focused on Germany, how the late fifteenth-century availability of printed classical texts, whether for teachers or for students, facilitated an internationalisation of local textual traditions, sometimes with cultural tensions as a result. P...

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Main Author: Kristian Jensen
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: University of Milan 2020-12-01
Series:Interfaces: A Journal of Medieval European Literatures
Subjects:
Online Access:https://riviste.unimi.it/interfaces/article/view/13680
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spelling doaj-ff222081204041ce93b9eaf1c6849edf2021-02-03T08:52:53ZdeuUniversity of MilanInterfaces: A Journal of Medieval European Literatures2421-55032020-12-01710.13130/interfaces-07-04Locher's and Grüninger's edition of Horace from Strasbourg 1498: At the crossroads between printed and manuscript book production and useKristian Jensen0The British Library This contribution aims to exemplify through a case study focused on Germany, how the late fifteenth-century availability of printed classical texts, whether for teachers or for students, facilitated an internationalisation of local textual traditions, sometimes with cultural tensions as a result. Printed books were commodities which modified both ways of engaging with texts and ways of producing manuscript texts. At the same time, pre-existing ways of making and using books formed the expectations of customers which producers of printed books sought to meet or, in a world of international commercial competition, even to exceed, by introducing innovative features which matched the evolving needs of potential buyers. We find a complex interplay of intellectual demands for change, institutionally established user expectations and the need for printers and publishers to create economically viable commodities, where printed books shaped a preexisting and continued manuscript based literary culture. https://riviste.unimi.it/interfaces/article/view/13680HoraceHoratiusClassical traditionHumanismcommentarieslayout
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kristian Jensen
spellingShingle Kristian Jensen
Locher's and Grüninger's edition of Horace from Strasbourg 1498: At the crossroads between printed and manuscript book production and use
Interfaces: A Journal of Medieval European Literatures
Horace
Horatius
Classical tradition
Humanism
commentaries
layout
author_facet Kristian Jensen
author_sort Kristian Jensen
title Locher's and Grüninger's edition of Horace from Strasbourg 1498: At the crossroads between printed and manuscript book production and use
title_short Locher's and Grüninger's edition of Horace from Strasbourg 1498: At the crossroads between printed and manuscript book production and use
title_full Locher's and Grüninger's edition of Horace from Strasbourg 1498: At the crossroads between printed and manuscript book production and use
title_fullStr Locher's and Grüninger's edition of Horace from Strasbourg 1498: At the crossroads between printed and manuscript book production and use
title_full_unstemmed Locher's and Grüninger's edition of Horace from Strasbourg 1498: At the crossroads between printed and manuscript book production and use
title_sort locher's and grüninger's edition of horace from strasbourg 1498: at the crossroads between printed and manuscript book production and use
publisher University of Milan
series Interfaces: A Journal of Medieval European Literatures
issn 2421-5503
publishDate 2020-12-01
description This contribution aims to exemplify through a case study focused on Germany, how the late fifteenth-century availability of printed classical texts, whether for teachers or for students, facilitated an internationalisation of local textual traditions, sometimes with cultural tensions as a result. Printed books were commodities which modified both ways of engaging with texts and ways of producing manuscript texts. At the same time, pre-existing ways of making and using books formed the expectations of customers which producers of printed books sought to meet or, in a world of international commercial competition, even to exceed, by introducing innovative features which matched the evolving needs of potential buyers. We find a complex interplay of intellectual demands for change, institutionally established user expectations and the need for printers and publishers to create economically viable commodities, where printed books shaped a preexisting and continued manuscript based literary culture.
topic Horace
Horatius
Classical tradition
Humanism
commentaries
layout
url https://riviste.unimi.it/interfaces/article/view/13680
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