@article{297180d0-fa3a-4e07-9422-72579c3fe453, author = {Magdalena Komorowska}, title = {Editing against the background of history. (Ann Blair’s Too Much to Know... and Anthony Grafton’s The Culture of Correction...)}, journal = {Wielogłos}, volume = {2012}, number = {Issue 3 (13) 2012}, year = {2012}, issn = {1897-1962}, pages = {273-277},keywords = {printing of the 15th-17th centuries; scholarly editing; encyclopaedias; history of intellectual culture}, abstract = {The first review deals with Ann Blair’s very interesting book on managing scholarly information up to the early modern era. A concise summary of Blair’s most important ideas is accompanied by a brief commentary underscoring the book’s merits and shortly referring to some of its more debatable details. The second review contains a brief summary of Anthony Grafton’s fascinating new book covering the work of book correctors and editors in the first two and a half centuries of print. The work done by one of the best scholars in the field of intellectual history is based mainly on case studies and leads to a conclusion that five hundred years ago publishing posed almost exactly the same problems as it does today.}, doi = {10.4467/2084395XWI.12.022.0877}, url = {https://ejournals.eu/en/journal/wieloglos/article/edytorstwo-z-historia-w-tle-o-ksiazkach-ann-blair-too-much-to-know-i-anthonyego-graftona-the-culture-of-correction} }