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Ephemeral City: Cheap Print and Urban Culture in Renaissance Venice

 
Ephemeral City: Cheap Print and Urban Culture in Renaissance Venice
, by , has been published by .

Ephemeral City explores the rapid rise of cheap print and how it permeated Venetian urban culture in the Renaissance. It offers the first view of one of the city's most productive and creative industries from the bottom up and a new and unexpected vision of Renaissance culture, characterised by the fluid mobility and dynamic intermingling of texts, ideas, goods and people.

Closely intertwined with oral culture and often peddled in the streets, cheap printed texts helped to open up new audiences for literature, providing information and entertainment to a diverse public and transforming the city into an epicentre of vernacular literature and performance. Examining the ways in which the production and dissemination of cheap print infiltrated Venice's urban environment and changed the course of its cultural life, the book also traces how local authorities responded by escalating censorship and control over the course of the sixteenth century.

Ephemeral City will be of interest to scholars and students of early modern European and Italian Renaissance culture and society and the history of the book and communication.

Please also see the section of the website for details of all academic publications by the staff of the ÌÇÐÄTV History Department.

Thu 02 Oct 2014, 13:08 | Tags: Publication

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