Western Libraries and Reading in the Mediterranean and India, c. 1600-1750



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Éditeur :

Palgrave Macmillan


Paru le : 2026-01-31



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Description

This book examines the contents of libraries of Western individuals and trading companies in the Mediterranean and India between approximately 1600 and 1750. Relying on extensive archival research, it provides a rare contribution to global book history.
The libraries studied are mostly small in scale, with very different scopes and characters. Catholic missionary libraries and the Mediterranean and British companies’ institutional libraries showed more standardization regarding the role books played in worship. In contrast, private libraries belonging to merchants, physicians, surgeons, scientific travellers, and ambassadors were characterized primarily by their owners’ professions.
The volume also examines how policies like censorship shaped libraries. This may partially explain many libraries’ more conservative characters, which manifested in the lack of broader Jansenist or clearly visible early and advanced Enlightenment influences. This book considers the “otherness” of Western cultural presence abroad until 1750: Westerners were just another trading population entering those regions. Performing a kind of proto-segregation, in “close distance” to their hosts, they mostly read books by other Westerners.
Pages
353 pages
Collection
n.c
Parution
2026-01-31
Marque
Palgrave Macmillan
EAN papier
9783032096364
EAN PDF
9783032096371

Informations sur l'ebook
Nombre pages copiables
3
Nombre pages imprimables
35
Taille du fichier
14510 Ko
Prix
168,79 €
EAN EPUB
9783032096371

Informations sur l'ebook
Nombre pages copiables
3
Nombre pages imprimables
35
Taille du fichier
4792 Ko
Prix
168,79 €

Cornel Zwierlein has taught early modern history in Germany since 2001 at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (PhD and postdoctoral period) and Freie Universität Berlin (Heisenberg Fellowship), and he is teaching at the Ruhr University Bochum (habilitation rights). He has worked in cooperation with, and researched at, such institutions as Harvard and Yale Universities and the University of California, Berkeley, in the USA, and the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom, as well as in France, the Netherlands, Italy, and beyond.

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