The evolution of the book / Frederick G. Kilgour.
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Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Dr. S. R. Lasker Library, EWU E-book | Non-fiction | 002.09 KIE 1998 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | ||||
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Dr. S. R. Lasker Library, EWU Reserve Section | Non-fiction | 002.09 KIE 1998 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | C-1 | Not For Loan | 25730 |
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001.6425 MAW 1996 Writing compilers and interpreters / | 001.6425 TEA 1995 PC Learning Labs teaches Excel 5.0 for Windows / | 001.6425 USI 1993 Using MS-DOS 6 / | 002.09 KIE 1998 The evolution of the book / | 002 LIT 2007 Literary cultures and the material book / | 002 LUC 2010 The coming of the book : | 002 LUC 2010 The coming of the book : |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 161-172) and index.
TOC Dynamics of the Book --
Incunables on Clay --
Papyrus Rolls --
The Greco-Roman World --
The Codex, 100-700 --
Islam, 622-1300 --
Western Christendom, 600-1400 --
Printing, 1400-1800 --
Power Revolution, 1800-1840 --
Climax of Books Printed from Cast Type, 1840-1940 --
Computer-Driven Book Production --
The Electronic Book.
Summary:
"Distinguished scholar and library systems innovator Frederick Kilgour tells a five-thousand-year story in this exciting work, a tale beginning with the invention of writing and concluding with the emerging electronic book. Calling on a lifetime of interest in the growth of information technology, Kilgour brings a fresh approach to the history of the book, emphasizing in rich, authoritative detail the successive technological advances that allowed the book to keep pace with ever-increasing needs for information. Borrowing a concept from evolutionary theory - the notion of punctuated equilibria - to structure his account, Kilgour investigates the book's three discrete historical forms - the clay tablet, papyrus roll, and codex - before turning to a fourth, still evolving form, the cyber book, a version promising swift electronic delivery of information in text, sound, and motion to anyone at any time." "The Evolution of the Book will captivate book lovers as well as those interested in bibliographic history, the history of writing, and the history of technology."--Jacket.
English
Tahur Ahmed
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