Grafton, Anthony (Editor):Rome Reborn; The Vatican Library & Renaissance Culture
- primeira edição 2012, ISBN: 9780844407678
Livro de bolso, Edição encadernada
Oxford U.P, 1950. Unknown Binding. Good. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed… mais…
Oxford U.P, 1950. Unknown Binding. Good. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Oxford U.P, 1950, 2.5, New York: Oxford University Press, 1950. Fourth edition of this classic history, here revised to include the events of World War Two and the immediate post-war period. Hardcovers in jacket, as pictured; volume one is a second printing, 1951; volume two the stated first printing of the fourth edition. Light wear to books; jacket tanned with light chipping, minor stains; ink name (mathematician & physicist Alwyn C. Scott) in each volume; a few short tears to maps. Text clean; xvi, [2], 825, [22]; xvii, [3], 974 pages; index, tables, bibliography, maps (mostly folding, a few with color) in each volume. A surcharge for expedited or international shipping of this set of books may be required; please inquire for an accurate quote.. Fourth Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good/Good. Large Octavo. Set., Oxford University Press, 1950, 2.75, New York ; Oxford : Durkheim Press/Berghahn Books, 2007. 1st edition. Hardcover. ProvenancE: Wendy Jane's copy,. Very good copy in the colour-printed boards. Spine bands and panel edges somewhat dulled and rubbed as with age. Bumped corners. Some light foxing to prelims. Remains quite well-preserved overall. Physical description: vi, 212 pages. Notes: ""Translated from the French: Manuel d'ethnographie ... c1967""--Title page verso. Includes bibliographical references and indexes. Contents: Preliminary remarks -- Methods of observation -- Social morphology -- Technology -- Aesthetics -- Economic phenomena -- Jural phenomena -- Moral phenomena -- Religious phenomena. Summary: Marcel Mauss (1872-1950) was the leading social anthropologist in Paris between the world wars, and his Manuel d'ethnographie, dating from that period, is the longest of all his texts. Despite having had four editions in France, the Manuel has hitherto been unavailable in English. This contrasts with his essays, longer and shorter, many of which have long enjoyed the status of classics within anthropology. We are therefore pleased to present, in the English language for the first time, this extraordinary work that is based on the more than thirty lectures Mauss delivered each. Subjects: Ethnology. Sociology Philosophy. Ethnology Study and teaching. Durkheimian school of sociology. Genre: Bibliography., New York ; Oxford : Durkheim Press/Berghahn Books, 2007, 0, New York: Geoffrey Cumberlege Oxford University Press, 1950. The World's Classics. 1 vols. 12mo. Bound in full red polished calf, with the Thaw family motto stamped in gilt on the upper cover: "Ou le Sort Appelle" (Where Destiny Calls), t.e.g. Fine. The World's Classics. 1 vols. 12mo., Geoffrey Cumberlege Oxford University Press, 1950, 0, New York: Geoffrey Cumberlege Oxford University Press, 1950. The World's Classics. 409, [1]pp. 1 vols. 12mo. Bound in full red polished calf, with the Thaw family motto stamped in gilt on the upper cover: "Ou le Sort Appelle" (Where Destiny Calls), t.e.g. Fine. The World's Classics. 409, [1]pp. 1 vols. 12mo., Geoffrey Cumberlege Oxford University Press, 1950, 0, London / Indianapolis: Gerald Duckworth & Co. Ltd. / Hackett Publishing Company, 1991. Hardcover. Revised by K.J. Dover. 8vo. Burgundy cloth with gilt spine lettering, dust jacket. lxxxii, 660pp. Fine/near fine. Jacket lightly rubbed. Superb and tight reprint of the 1950 second edition of a classic study first published by Oxford in 1934., Gerald Duckworth & Co. Ltd. / Hackett Publishing Company, 1991, 0, Oxford:: Oxford University Press,, [1931].. First 'World's Classics' printing.. Hardcover. Very Good. xiv, 317pp: with the silk bookmark. The previous owner was neat, but has neatly marked the text at pp 240 & 242, and I have found and have straightened about a dozen of his neatly dog-eared corners. There is also a tiny mark at p.95. Contents otherwise clean and unmarked and in very good order. In the pre-1950s World's Classics binding of smooth navy cloth, decorated in blind, spine titled in gilt: bright and fresh, with two pale marks to the upper board, slight blunting to lower corners and slight scuffs to spine ends. Not a common title in this edition., Oxford University Press, 3, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press, 1950. Hardcover. Very Good/Poor. 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall. Contains Tolstoy's conclusions at the close of the years he gave to a study of religion. He rejected the Church; he accepted the morality of Jesus. Translated with an Introduction. World Classics seriesNo 426. Reprinted. Geoffrey Cumberlege / Oxford University Press, London 1950. xvi + 412pp hb dw clipped, discoloured, frayed & part missing, grey dw, gilt blue cloth, pages slightly browned, book vg, Oxford University Press, 1950, 2, Washington DC, Vatican City: Library of Congress in association with Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, 1993. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Trade paperback. Very good. Format is approximately 9 inches by 12 inches. xxvi, 323, [3] pages. Minor cover wear. Illustrated frontis. Illustrations (many in color). Notes. References. Manuscripts and Printed Books from the Vatican Library Listed by Fondi. Index. Preface by James H. Billington. Essay on The Vatican Library by Leonard E. Boyle. Chapters on The Vatican and Its library, The Popes and Humanism, The Ancient City Restored: Archaeology, Ecclesiastical History, and Egyptology, the Recovery of the Exact Science of Antiquity: Mathematics, Astronomy, Geography, Life Sciences and Medicine in the Renaissance World, Music and the Renaissance Papacy: The Papal Choir and the Fondo Cappella Sistina, Eastern Churches and Western Scholarship, and Paper Obelisks: East Asia in the Vatican Vaults. This is a catalog of an exhibition that was held at the Library of Congress, Washing, D.C., Jan. 6--Apr. 30, 1993. This exhibition which this book accompanied was the first in a planned series of exhibitions that the Library of Congress planed to present about great libraries of the world. The catalogues that provide a record of each exhibition were intended to go far beyond the usual descriptions of the artifacts. These books were intended to be distinguished by highly readable scholarly studies, written by leading specialists, of the intellectual, social and cultural environments that created the objects on display. Contributors to this catalogue included: James Hankins, N. M. Swerdlow, Nancy Siraisi, Richard Sherr, Alastair Hamilton, and Howard Goodman. Anthony Thomas Grafton (born 1950) is an American historian of early modern Europe and the Henry Putnam University Professor of History at Princeton University, where he is also the Director the Program in European Cultural Studies. He is also a corresponding fellow of the British Academy and a recipient of the Balzan Prize. From January 2011 to January 2012, he served as the President of the American Historical Association. After a brief period teaching at Cornell's history department, he was appointed to a position at Princeton University in 1975, where he has subsequently remained. Since January 2007, he has been a co-editor of the Journal of the History of Ideas. Anthony Grafton is noted for his studies of the classical tradition from the Renaissance to the eighteenth century, and in the history of historical scholarship. His many books include a study of the scholarship and chronology of Renaissance scholar Joseph Scaliger (2 vols., 1983-1993), and, more recently, studies of Girolamo Cardano as an astrologer (1999) and Leon Battista Alberti (2000). In 1996, he delivered the Triennial E. A. Lowe Lectures at Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford, speaking on Ancient History in Early Modern Europe. Together with Lisa Jardine, he also co-wrote a revisionist account of the significance of Renaissance education (From Humanism to the Humanities, 1986) and on the marginalia of Gabriel Harvey. He also penned several essay collections, including Defenders of the Text (1991), which deals with the relations between scholarship and science in the early modern period, and, most recently, Worlds Made by Words. His most original and accessible book is The Footnote: A Curious History (1997), a case study of how the marginal footnote developed as a central and powerful tool in the hands of historians., Library of Congress in association with Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, 1993, 3<