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184 books about Book and 12 start with P
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The Panarion of Epiphanius of Salamis: Book I (Sects 1–46)
Frank Williams
SBL Press, 2016

Now in Paperback!

Epiphanius, monastic founder and bishop of Salamis on Cyprus for almost forty years of the fourth century, threw heart and soul into the controversies of the time and produced the Panario or Medicine Chest, a historical encyclopedia of sects and heresies and their refutations. Book I deals with material that is also found in Nag Hammadi, other Gnostic writings, and in such patristic authors as Irenaeus and Hippolytus. Students of Nag Hammadi and Gnosticism, patrologists, historians of religion, church historians, and Judaism have found this translation useful.

Features:

  • Paperback format of an essential Brill reference set
  • Coverage of Gnostic and Jewish Christian groups
  • Documents not available elsewhere in paperback
Expand Description

The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, volume 115 number 4 (December 2021)
The University of Chicago Press
University of Chicago Press Journals, 2021

This is volume 115 issue 4 of The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. Published on behalf of the oldest scholarly society in North America dedicated to the study of books and other textual artifacts in traditional and emerging formats, The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America contains articles on book and manuscript production, publication, distribution, collecting, and reading in all periods, geographical regions, and media, as well as editorial and textual scholarship across all disciplines. The journal publishes original articles, book reviews, bibliographical notes, and review essays.
Expand Description

The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, volume 116 number 1 (March 2022)
The University of Chicago Press
University of Chicago Press Journals, 2022

This is volume 116 issue 1 of The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. Published on behalf of the oldest scholarly society in North America dedicated to the study of books and other textual artifacts in traditional and emerging formats, The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America contains articles on book and manuscript production, publication, distribution, collecting, and reading in all periods, geographical regions, and media, as well as editorial and textual scholarship across all disciplines. The journal publishes original articles, book reviews, bibliographical notes, and review essays.
Expand Description

The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, volume 116 number 2 (June 2022)
The University of Chicago Press
University of Chicago Press Journals, 2022

This is volume 116 issue 2 of The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. Published on behalf of the oldest scholarly society in North America dedicated to the study of books and other textual artifacts in traditional and emerging formats, The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America contains articles on book and manuscript production, publication, distribution, collecting, and reading in all periods, geographical regions, and media, as well as editorial and textual scholarship across all disciplines. The journal publishes original articles, book reviews, bibliographical notes, and review essays.
Expand Description

The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, volume 116 number 3 (September 2022)
The University of Chicago Press
University of Chicago Press Journals, 2022

This is volume 116 issue 3 of The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. Published on behalf of the oldest scholarly society in North America dedicated to the study of books and other textual artifacts in traditional and emerging formats, The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America contains articles on book and manuscript production, publication, distribution, collecting, and reading in all periods, geographical regions, and media, as well as editorial and textual scholarship across all disciplines. The journal publishes original articles, book reviews, bibliographical notes, and review essays.
Expand Description

The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, volume 116 number 4 (December 2022)
The University of Chicago Press
University of Chicago Press Journals, 2022

This is volume 116 issue 4 of The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. Published on behalf of the oldest scholarly society in North America dedicated to the study of books and other textual artifacts in traditional and emerging formats, The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America contains articles on book and manuscript production, publication, distribution, collecting, and reading in all periods, geographical regions, and media, as well as editorial and textual scholarship across all disciplines. The journal publishes original articles, book reviews, bibliographical notes, and review essays.
Expand Description

People of the Book: Canon, Meaning, and Authority
Moshe Halbertal
Harvard University Press, 1997
Library of Congress BS1186.H23 1997 | Dewey Decimal 296.1

While Scripture is at the center of many religions, among them Islam and Christianity, this book inquires into the function, development, and implications of the centrality of text upon the Jewish community, and by extension on the larger question of canonization and the text-centered community. It is a commonplace to note how the landless and scattered Jewish communities have, from the time of the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 A.D. until the founding of modern Israel in 1948, cleaved to the text and derived their identity from it. But the story is far more complex. The shift from the Bible to the Torah, from biblical religion to rabbinic Judaism mediated by the Sages, and the sealing of the canon together with its continuing interpretive work demanded from the community, amount to what could be called an unparalleled obsession with textuality. Halbertal gives us insights into the history of this obsession, in a philosophically sophisticated yet straightforward narrative.

People of the Book offers the best introduction available to Jewish hermeneutics, a book capable of conveying the importance of the tradition to a wide audience of both academic and general readers. Halbertal provides a panoramic survey of Jewish attitudes toward Scripture, provocatively organized around problems of normative and formative authority, with an emphasis on the changing status and functions of Mishnah, Talmud, and Kabbalah. With a gift for weaving complex issues of interpretation into his own plot, he animates ancient texts by assigning them roles in his own highly persuasive narrative.

Expand Description

Picturing the Book of Nature: Image, Text, and Argument in Sixteenth-Century Human Anatomy and Medical Botany
Sachiko Kusukawa
University of Chicago Press, 2012
Library of Congress QH46.5.K87 2011 | Dewey Decimal 508.0222

Because of their spectacular, naturalistic pictures of plants and the human body, Leonhart Fuchs’s De historia stirpium and Andreas Vesalius’s De humani corporis fabrica are landmark publications in the history of the printed book. But as Picturing the Book of Nature makes clear, they do more than bear witness to the development of book publishing during the Renaissance and to the prominence attained by the fields of medical botany and anatomy in European medicine. Sachiko Kusukawa examines these texts, as well as Conrad Gessner’s unpublished Historia plantarum, and demonstrates how their illustrations were integral to the emergence of a new type of argument during this period—a visual argument for the scientific study of nature.

 
To set the stage, Kusukawa begins with a survey of the technical, financial, artistic, and political conditions that governed the production of printed books during the Renaissance. It was during the first half of the sixteenth century that learned authors began using images in their research and writing, but because the technology was so new, there was a great deal of variety of thought—and often disagreement—about exactly what images could do: how they should be used, what degree of authority should be attributed to them, which graphic elements were bearers of that authority, and what sorts of truths images could and did encode. Kusukawa investigates the works of Fuchs, Gessner, and Vesalius in light of these debates, scrutinizing the scientists’ treatment of illustrations and tracing their motivation for including them in their works. What results is a fascinating and original study of the visual dimension of scientific knowledge in the sixteenth century.
Expand Description

Plough, Sword, and Book: The Structure of Human History
Ernest Gellner
University of Chicago Press, 1988
Library of Congress D16.8.G413 1989 | Dewey Decimal 901

"Philosophical anthropology on the grandest scale. . . .Gellner has produced a sharp challenge to his colleagues and a thrilling book for the non-specialist. Deductive history on this scale cannot be proved right or wrong, but this is Gellner writing, incisive, iconoclastic, witty and expert. His scenario compels our attention."—Adam Kuper, New Statesman

"A thoughtful and lively meditation upon probably the greatest transformation in human history, upon the difficult problems it poses and the scant resources it has left us to solve them."—Charles Larmore, New Republic
Expand Description

The Portrait and the Book: Illustration and Literary Culture in Early America
Megan Walsh
University of Iowa Press, 2017
Library of Congress NC961.7.P67W35 2017 | Dewey Decimal 096.10973

In the nineteenth century, new image-making methods like steel engraving and lithography caused a surge in the publication of illustrated books in the United States. Yet even before the widespread use of these technologies, Americans had already established the illustrated book format as central to the nation’s literary culture. In The Portrait and the Book, Megan Walsh argues that colonial-era author portraits, such as Benjamin Franklin’s and Phillis Wheatley’s frontispieces; political portraits that circulated during the debates over the Constitution, such as those of the Founders by Charles Willson Peale; and portraits of beloved fictional characters in the 1790s, such as those of Samuel Richardson’s heroine Pamela, shaped readers’ conceptions of American literature.

Illustrations played a key role in American literary culture despite the fact there was little demand for books by American writers. Indeed, most of the illustrated books bought, sold, and shared by Americans were either imported British works or reprinted versions of those imported editions. As a result, in addition to embellishing books, illustrations provided readers with crucial information about the country’s status as a former colony.

Through an examination of readers’ portrait-collecting habits, writers’ employment of ekphrasis, printers’ efforts to secure American-made illustrations for periodicals, and engravers’ reproductions of British book illustrations, Walsh uncovers in late eighteenth-century America a dynamic but forgotten visual culture that was inextricably tied to the printing industry and to the early US literary imagination.
Expand Description

Priests and Cults in the Book of the Twelve
Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer
SBL Press, 2016
Library of Congress BS1199.P7P758 2016 | Dewey Decimal 224.906

Key essays that explore a range of attitudes toward clergy and ritual

This book discusses the depictions of the cult and its personnel in the twelve prophetic books commonly referred to as the Book of the Twelve or the Minor Prophets. The articles in the volume explore the following questions: How did these prophetic writers envision the priests and the Levites? What did they think about the ritual aspects of ancient Israelite faith, including not only the official temple cult in Jerusalem but also cultic expressions outside the capital? What, in their views, characterized a faithful priest and what should the relationship be between his cultic performance and the ways in which he lived his life? How does the message of each individual author fit in with the wider Israelite traditions? Finally, who were these prophetic authors, in which historical contexts did they live and work, and what stylistic tools did they use to communicate their message?

Features:

  • Essays investigate the ways in which key texts in the Book of the Twelve endorse, criticize, seek to reform, or seek to abolish the cult and clergy
  • Articles focus on the books of Hosea, Joel, Amos, Zephaniah, Zechariah, and Malachi, but include other texts
  • Exploration of how the attitudes towards cult and clergy in these key texts tie in with the attitudes found elsewhere in the Book of the Twelve
  • Expand Description

    Providencia: A Book of Poems
    Sean Frederick Forbes
    2Leaf Press, 2013
    Library of Congress PS3606.O696A6 2013 | Dewey Decimal 811.6

    PROVIDENCIA, Sean Frederick Forbes' debut poetry collection, offers deeply personal poetry that digs beneath the surface of family history and myth. This coming of age narrative traces the experience of a gay, mixed-race narrator who confronts the traditions of his parents' and grandparents' birthplace: the seemingly idyllic island of Providencia, Colombia against the backdrop of his rough and lonely life in Southside Jamaica, Queens. These lyric poems open doors onto a third space for the speaker, one that does not isolate or hinder his sexual, racial, and artistic identities. Written in both free verse and traditional poetic forms, PROVIDENCIA conjures numerous voices, images, and characters to explore the struggles of self-discovery.
    Expand Description

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    184 books about Book and 12 184 books about Book
     12
     start with P  start with P
    The Panarion of Epiphanius of Salamis
    Book I (Sects 1–46)
    Frank Williams
    SBL Press, 2016

    Now in Paperback!

    Epiphanius, monastic founder and bishop of Salamis on Cyprus for almost forty years of the fourth century, threw heart and soul into the controversies of the time and produced the Panario or Medicine Chest, a historical encyclopedia of sects and heresies and their refutations. Book I deals with material that is also found in Nag Hammadi, other Gnostic writings, and in such patristic authors as Irenaeus and Hippolytus. Students of Nag Hammadi and Gnosticism, patrologists, historians of religion, church historians, and Judaism have found this translation useful.

    Features:

    • Paperback format of an essential Brill reference set
    • Coverage of Gnostic and Jewish Christian groups
    • Documents not available elsewhere in paperback
    [more]

    The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, volume 115 number 4 (December 2021)
    The University of Chicago Press
    University of Chicago Press Journals, 2021
    This is volume 115 issue 4 of The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. Published on behalf of the oldest scholarly society in North America dedicated to the study of books and other textual artifacts in traditional and emerging formats, The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America contains articles on book and manuscript production, publication, distribution, collecting, and reading in all periods, geographical regions, and media, as well as editorial and textual scholarship across all disciplines. The journal publishes original articles, book reviews, bibliographical notes, and review essays.
    [more]

    The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, volume 116 number 1 (March 2022)
    The University of Chicago Press
    University of Chicago Press Journals, 2022
    This is volume 116 issue 1 of The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. Published on behalf of the oldest scholarly society in North America dedicated to the study of books and other textual artifacts in traditional and emerging formats, The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America contains articles on book and manuscript production, publication, distribution, collecting, and reading in all periods, geographical regions, and media, as well as editorial and textual scholarship across all disciplines. The journal publishes original articles, book reviews, bibliographical notes, and review essays.
    [more]

    The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, volume 116 number 2 (June 2022)
    The University of Chicago Press
    University of Chicago Press Journals, 2022
    This is volume 116 issue 2 of The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. Published on behalf of the oldest scholarly society in North America dedicated to the study of books and other textual artifacts in traditional and emerging formats, The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America contains articles on book and manuscript production, publication, distribution, collecting, and reading in all periods, geographical regions, and media, as well as editorial and textual scholarship across all disciplines. The journal publishes original articles, book reviews, bibliographical notes, and review essays.
    [more]

    The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, volume 116 number 3 (September 2022)
    The University of Chicago Press
    University of Chicago Press Journals, 2022
    This is volume 116 issue 3 of The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. Published on behalf of the oldest scholarly society in North America dedicated to the study of books and other textual artifacts in traditional and emerging formats, The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America contains articles on book and manuscript production, publication, distribution, collecting, and reading in all periods, geographical regions, and media, as well as editorial and textual scholarship across all disciplines. The journal publishes original articles, book reviews, bibliographical notes, and review essays.
    [more]

    The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, volume 116 number 4 (December 2022)
    The University of Chicago Press
    University of Chicago Press Journals, 2022
    This is volume 116 issue 4 of The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America. Published on behalf of the oldest scholarly society in North America dedicated to the study of books and other textual artifacts in traditional and emerging formats, The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America contains articles on book and manuscript production, publication, distribution, collecting, and reading in all periods, geographical regions, and media, as well as editorial and textual scholarship across all disciplines. The journal publishes original articles, book reviews, bibliographical notes, and review essays.
    [more]

    People of the Book
    Canon, Meaning, and Authority
    Moshe Halbertal
    Harvard University Press, 1997

    While Scripture is at the center of many religions, among them Islam and Christianity, this book inquires into the function, development, and implications of the centrality of text upon the Jewish community, and by extension on the larger question of canonization and the text-centered community. It is a commonplace to note how the landless and scattered Jewish communities have, from the time of the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 A.D. until the founding of modern Israel in 1948, cleaved to the text and derived their identity from it. But the story is far more complex. The shift from the Bible to the Torah, from biblical religion to rabbinic Judaism mediated by the Sages, and the sealing of the canon together with its continuing interpretive work demanded from the community, amount to what could be called an unparalleled obsession with textuality. Halbertal gives us insights into the history of this obsession, in a philosophically sophisticated yet straightforward narrative.

    People of the Book offers the best introduction available to Jewish hermeneutics, a book capable of conveying the importance of the tradition to a wide audience of both academic and general readers. Halbertal provides a panoramic survey of Jewish attitudes toward Scripture, provocatively organized around problems of normative and formative authority, with an emphasis on the changing status and functions of Mishnah, Talmud, and Kabbalah. With a gift for weaving complex issues of interpretation into his own plot, he animates ancient texts by assigning them roles in his own highly persuasive narrative.

    [more]

    Picturing the Book of Nature
    Image, Text, and Argument in Sixteenth-Century Human Anatomy and Medical Botany
    Sachiko Kusukawa
    University of Chicago Press, 2012

    Because of their spectacular, naturalistic pictures of plants and the human body, Leonhart Fuchs’s De historia stirpium and Andreas Vesalius’s De humani corporis fabrica are landmark publications in the history of the printed book. But as Picturing the Book of Nature makes clear, they do more than bear witness to the development of book publishing during the Renaissance and to the prominence attained by the fields of medical botany and anatomy in European medicine. Sachiko Kusukawa examines these texts, as well as Conrad Gessner’s unpublished Historia plantarum, and demonstrates how their illustrations were integral to the emergence of a new type of argument during this period—a visual argument for the scientific study of nature.

     
    To set the stage, Kusukawa begins with a survey of the technical, financial, artistic, and political conditions that governed the production of printed books during the Renaissance. It was during the first half of the sixteenth century that learned authors began using images in their research and writing, but because the technology was so new, there was a great deal of variety of thought—and often disagreement—about exactly what images could do: how they should be used, what degree of authority should be attributed to them, which graphic elements were bearers of that authority, and what sorts of truths images could and did encode. Kusukawa investigates the works of Fuchs, Gessner, and Vesalius in light of these debates, scrutinizing the scientists’ treatment of illustrations and tracing their motivation for including them in their works. What results is a fascinating and original study of the visual dimension of scientific knowledge in the sixteenth century.
    [more]

    Plough, Sword, and Book
    The Structure of Human History
    Ernest Gellner
    University of Chicago Press, 1988
    "Philosophical anthropology on the grandest scale. . . .Gellner has produced a sharp challenge to his colleagues and a thrilling book for the non-specialist. Deductive history on this scale cannot be proved right or wrong, but this is Gellner writing, incisive, iconoclastic, witty and expert. His scenario compels our attention."—Adam Kuper, New Statesman

    "A thoughtful and lively meditation upon probably the greatest transformation in human history, upon the difficult problems it poses and the scant resources it has left us to solve them."—Charles Larmore, New Republic
    [more]

    The Portrait and the Book
    Illustration and Literary Culture in Early America
    Megan Walsh
    University of Iowa Press, 2017
    In the nineteenth century, new image-making methods like steel engraving and lithography caused a surge in the publication of illustrated books in the United States. Yet even before the widespread use of these technologies, Americans had already established the illustrated book format as central to the nation’s literary culture. In The Portrait and the Book, Megan Walsh argues that colonial-era author portraits, such as Benjamin Franklin’s and Phillis Wheatley’s frontispieces; political portraits that circulated during the debates over the Constitution, such as those of the Founders by Charles Willson Peale; and portraits of beloved fictional characters in the 1790s, such as those of Samuel Richardson’s heroine Pamela, shaped readers’ conceptions of American literature.

    Illustrations played a key role in American literary culture despite the fact there was little demand for books by American writers. Indeed, most of the illustrated books bought, sold, and shared by Americans were either imported British works or reprinted versions of those imported editions. As a result, in addition to embellishing books, illustrations provided readers with crucial information about the country’s status as a former colony.

    Through an examination of readers’ portrait-collecting habits, writers’ employment of ekphrasis, printers’ efforts to secure American-made illustrations for periodicals, and engravers’ reproductions of British book illustrations, Walsh uncovers in late eighteenth-century America a dynamic but forgotten visual culture that was inextricably tied to the printing industry and to the early US literary imagination.
    [more]

    Priests and Cults in the Book of the Twelve
    Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer
    SBL Press, 2016

    Key essays that explore a range of attitudes toward clergy and ritual

    This book discusses the depictions of the cult and its personnel in the twelve prophetic books commonly referred to as the Book of the Twelve or the Minor Prophets. The articles in the volume explore the following questions: How did these prophetic writers envision the priests and the Levites? What did they think about the ritual aspects of ancient Israelite faith, including not only the official temple cult in Jerusalem but also cultic expressions outside the capital? What, in their views, characterized a faithful priest and what should the relationship be between his cultic performance and the ways in which he lived his life? How does the message of each individual author fit in with the wider Israelite traditions? Finally, who were these prophetic authors, in which historical contexts did they live and work, and what stylistic tools did they use to communicate their message?

    Features:

  • Essays investigate the ways in which key texts in the Book of the Twelve endorse, criticize, seek to reform, or seek to abolish the cult and clergy
  • Articles focus on the books of Hosea, Joel, Amos, Zephaniah, Zechariah, and Malachi, but include other texts
  • Exploration of how the attitudes towards cult and clergy in these key texts tie in with the attitudes found elsewhere in the Book of the Twelve
  • [more]

    Providencia
    A Book of Poems
    Sean Frederick Forbes
    2Leaf Press, 2013
    PROVIDENCIA, Sean Frederick Forbes' debut poetry collection, offers deeply personal poetry that digs beneath the surface of family history and myth. This coming of age narrative traces the experience of a gay, mixed-race narrator who confronts the traditions of his parents' and grandparents' birthplace: the seemingly idyllic island of Providencia, Colombia against the backdrop of his rough and lonely life in Southside Jamaica, Queens. These lyric poems open doors onto a third space for the speaker, one that does not isolate or hinder his sexual, racial, and artistic identities. Written in both free verse and traditional poetic forms, PROVIDENCIA conjures numerous voices, images, and characters to explore the struggles of self-discovery.
    [more]




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    BiblioVault ® 2001 - 2023
    The University of Chicago Press