Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
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emlcjournal.bsky.social
Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
@emlcjournal.bsky.social
EMLC is a leading open access journal dedicated to the study of the early modern Low Countries. We publish multidisciplinary and state-of-the-art scholarship on any aspect of the turbulent history of this region from 1500-1850
Pinned
Check out our new special issue edited by Marius Buning and Marlise Rijks on printing privileges in early modern Low Countries
emlc-journal.org/issue/view/1...
In many histories of early modern printing houses, women play a secondary role. Heleen Wyffels questions this narrative and asks instead: what happens when we read the stories that printers themselves told about their family businesses? Read her article for free: doi.org/10.51750/eml... #bookhistory
May 6, 2025 at 7:30 AM
How did economic transformations alter women’s work and vice versa? Ariadne Schmidt examines developments in the historiography on women’s work and pleads for a diversified approach to better understand the interplay between gender relations and the economy. doi.org/10.51750/eml...
May 6, 2025 at 7:29 AM
We launched our latest issue on Early Modern Women in the Low Countries at Columbia University in New York. Give us a follow or tell your friends to follow us, this week we will post about the articles in the issue. So stay tuned! www.emlc-journal.org
May 6, 2025 at 7:27 AM
Reposted by Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
We're celebrating a decade of Low Countries scholarship! Please send in your proposal for a short essay, we'd love to hear from you.
We are planning a festive issue for our tenth anniversary🥳. We are looking for potential contributions! #CfP, please spread this as widely as possible. And get in touch if you have questions, all details below. #LowCountries
April 30, 2025 at 12:59 PM
We are planning a festive issue for our tenth anniversary🥳. We are looking for potential contributions! #CfP, please spread this as widely as possible. And get in touch if you have questions, all details below. #LowCountries
April 11, 2025 at 8:07 AM
We also have reviews on offer (all in open access): including @christinekooi.bsky.social on Yasuhira's new monograph on Catholic Survival in the Dutch Republic. #earlymodern #LowCountries doi.org/10.51750/eml...
Genji Yasuhira, Catholic Survival in the Dutch Republic. Agency in Coexistence and the Public Sphere in Utrecht, 1620-1672 | Early Modern Low Countries
Early Modern Low Countries
doi.org
January 9, 2025 at 10:00 AM
Why would printers from Rome, Frankfurt an der Oder, Dillingen or Pont à Mousson request a printing privilege in the 17th c. Habsburg Netherlands or the Dutch Republic?
@ninalamal.bsky.social explores the phenomenon of cross-border requests #Earlymodern #bookhistory
doi.org/10.51750/eml...
January 9, 2025 at 9:55 AM
Reposted by Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
📢 Marius Buning (PI @be4copy.bsky.social) explore the role of printing privileges in shaping information, cultural values and political agendas - locally and across Europe. #History #BookHistory #Skystorians #earlymodern doi.org/10.51750/eml...
doi.org
December 20, 2024 at 10:36 AM
Reposted by Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
#legalhistory Stef van Gompel debunks the persistent myth that Dutch schoolbooks were not protected by printing privileges #openeducationalbooks doi.org/10.51750/eml...
December 20, 2024 at 10:33 AM
Reposted by Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
Can researchers rely on printed summaries of privileges? @kristofselle.bsky.social compares the original privileges granted to Balthasar Moretus I with the printed summaries. Discover the answer here: doi.org/10.51750/eml...
#bookhistory #earlymodern
doi.org
December 20, 2024 at 10:28 AM
Reposted by Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
What can forgeries tell us about the perception of printing privileges in the Dutch Republic? And why was Jacob Cats's publisher so furious about a stolen coat? Read Hylkema ‘s article #forgeries #bookhistory #earlymodern doi.org/10.51750/eml...
doi.org
December 20, 2024 at 10:25 AM
Reposted by Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
Nina Geerdink focusses on psalmists and printers of psalters and their engagement with the system of printing privileges and asks how this system interacted with the pluralism of the seventeenth-century Dutch religious landscape #authors #religioushistory doi.org/10.51750/eml...
December 20, 2024 at 10:25 AM
Reposted by Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
How to deal with disruptive image-technology in the early modern period? Marlise Rijks explores this question for early modern printmakers in the Low Countries. #arthistory #skystorians #earlymodern #printmaking doi.org/10.51750/eml...
December 20, 2024 at 10:18 AM
Reposted by Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
In case you missed it in the chaos of Christmas: NEW ISSUE!!! And it's an exciting #BookHistory one at that! #EarlyModern #Skystorians #LowCountries #IWillKeepPuttingAllTheTagsOnEveryPost
How did printing privileges forge connections and shape boundaries, as well as influence authorship and the public domain? Check out the introduction to our interdisciplinary issue edited by Marlise Rijks & Marius Bunning on early modern printing privileges in Low Countries. doi.org/10.51750/eml...
January 8, 2025 at 3:07 PM
In case you missed the publication of our new issue right before Christmas, do check out our interdisciplinary issue on printing privileges in #Earlymodern Low Countries #Skystorians
How did printing privileges forge connections and shape boundaries, as well as influence authorship and the public domain? Check out the introduction to our interdisciplinary issue edited by Marlise Rijks & Marius Bunning on early modern printing privileges in Low Countries. doi.org/10.51750/eml...
January 9, 2025 at 9:48 AM
Reposted by Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
Nina Geerdink focusses on psalmists and printers of psalters and their engagement with the system of printing privileges and asks how this system interacted with the pluralism of the seventeenth-century Dutch religious landscape #authors #religioushistory doi.org/10.51750/eml...
December 20, 2024 at 12:16 PM
Reposted by Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
Very excited that my article on the privilege summaries printed by Balthasar Moretus I has just been published in @emlcjournal.bsky.social 😍📖 The article is available in open access at emlc-journal.org/article/view... (the DOI provided appears to be invalid)

#bookhistory
#earlymodern
December 20, 2024 at 11:41 AM
Check out our new special issue edited by Marius Buning and Marlise Rijks on printing privileges in early modern Low Countries
emlc-journal.org/issue/view/1...
December 20, 2024 at 10:49 AM
Why would printers from Frankfurt an der Oder, Dillingen or Pont à Mousson request a printing privilege in the 17th c. Habsburg Netherlands or the Dutch Republic? @ninalamal.bsky.social explores for the first time this phenomenon of cross-border requests #printdiplomacy doi.org/10.51750/eml...
doi.org
December 20, 2024 at 10:41 AM
📢 Marius Buning (PI @be4copy.bsky.social) explore the role of printing privileges in shaping information, cultural values and political agendas - locally and across Europe. #History #BookHistory #Skystorians #earlymodern doi.org/10.51750/eml...
doi.org
December 20, 2024 at 10:36 AM
#legalhistory Stef van Gompel debunks the persistent myth that Dutch schoolbooks were not protected by printing privileges #openeducationalbooks doi.org/10.51750/eml...
December 20, 2024 at 10:33 AM
Can researchers rely on printed summaries of privileges? @kristofselle.bsky.social compares the original privileges granted to Balthasar Moretus I with the printed summaries. Discover the answer here: doi.org/10.51750/eml...
#bookhistory #earlymodern
doi.org
December 20, 2024 at 10:28 AM
What can forgeries tell us about the perception of printing privileges in the Dutch Republic? And why was Jacob Cats's publisher so furious about a stolen coat? Read Hylkema ‘s article #forgeries #bookhistory #earlymodern doi.org/10.51750/eml...
doi.org
December 20, 2024 at 10:25 AM
How did printing privileges forge connections and shape boundaries, as well as influence authorship and the public domain? Check out the introduction to our interdisciplinary issue edited by Marlise Rijks & Marius Bunning on early modern printing privileges in Low Countries. doi.org/10.51750/eml...
December 20, 2024 at 10:18 AM
Reposted by Early Modern Low Countries (EMLC)
Leuke uitdaging! Wie komt ons helpen met een super nummer rond vrouwen in de vroegmoderne Nederlanden? (Oh, ja, stiekem dat leuke nieuws dan ook meegegeven: wordt een top volume!)
Wil je graag ervaring opdoen bij een wetenschappelijke tijdschrift? Wij zijn op zoek naar een redactie-assistent (+/- 4 uur per week). Meer informatie over taken en je profiel in onze vacaturetekst. #Skystorians #Spreadtheword
November 27, 2024 at 1:22 PM