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Academic literature on the topic 'Imprimerie – Paris (France) – 17e siècle'
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Journal articles on the topic "Imprimerie – Paris (France) – 17e siècle"
Tésio, Stéphanie. "Climat et médecine à Québec au milieu du 18e siècle." Scientia Canadensis 31, no. 1-2 (January 23, 2009): 155–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/019759ar.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Imprimerie – Paris (France) – 17e siècle"
Juratic, Sabine. "Le monde du livre à Paris entre absolutisme et Lumières : recherches sur l'économie de l'imprimé et sur ses acteurs." Paris, EPHE, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003EPHE4051.
Full textBased on a study of printed books professionals and their practices, this thesis evaluates the economic impact of the state control over all printed material that king louis the xivth established at the beginning of his reign and that lasted until the revolution. First part looks into printing and publishing organization in paris as driven by booksellers and printers community. Second part details socio-professional aspects of master printers from end of 17th and over a century. The last part highligts the changes in printing labor and how they impact the distribution business
Bouquin, Corinne. "Recherches sur l'imprimerie lithographique à Paris au XIXème siècle : l'imprimerie Lemercier (1803-1901)." Paris 1, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1993PA010729.
Full textLithography is not only a new technique among others, it is also the impulse of an overthrow in the world of picture during the nineteenth century. Born with the century, this invention will mark it, evolving technically toward photography. These researches focuse on the printers often reglected as compared to the artists. All those lithographic printers, mainly of modest origin, because lithography by accident or ambition. Most of them were general printers albeit a few were specialized in a particular type of picture. Little known on the whole, this profession was really a part of the book business. A few names are still known today, among these is Rose-Joseph Lemercier, ambitious business man sensitive to artistic lithography. During his career, pictures from artists like Achille Deveria, Eugene Ciceri, Rodolphe Bresdin ou Odilon Redon are printed along with posters or popular prints. The important production of this printing-works conclude the study of his founder, from his activity of basket-maker to the position of head in his firm, and shows the perspectives of the numerous uses of this new technique, especially within illustrated books
Guilbaud, Juliette. ""À Paris, chez Guillaume Desprez. . . " : le livre janséniste et ses réseaux aux XVII et XVIII siècles." Paris, EPHE, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005EPHE4045.
Full textThe Jansenist movement has been primarily, until now, the subject of analyses dominated by issues concerning literary history, limited in national historiographical aspects. The thesis focuses on a new approach related to book history. It aims to demonstrate that the partisans of Jansenism, in spite of their social diversity, can be regarded as a party, utilising printed matter as a basis for cohesion and propaganda. The organisation of this party is, above all, strategic. This is because it relies on a network of influential relations in competing powerful and controversial. The political and religious authorities understood its potential and realised that it was necessary to control the spread of its ideas. The Jansenists, with the help of their printers and book sellers, ensured efficacy of the publication and diffusion of their ideas. The Jansenists, with the help of their printers and book sellers, ensured efficacy of the publication and diffusion of their ideas. This thesis demonstrates precisely how Jansenism used printed matter to influence public opinion and how it can be understood in relation to the modern phenomena of mass media and mass circulation. The role consequently allowed the Jansenist movement to spread throughout Europe, particularly in the German-speaking territories and in Central Europe, in the seventeenth and especially the eighteenth century. Also during this period, the Jansenists made use of innovations in the technology of printed matter to futher perpetuate the diffusion of their literature
Cuvelier, Laurent. "La ville captivée : affichage et économie de l’attention à Paris au XVIIIe siècle." Thesis, Paris, Institut d'études politiques, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019IEPP0034.
Full textParis in the XVIIIth century was characterized by important evolutions in consumerism and exchanges. In this context, commercial posters and personal ads started to compete with state public writings and libels on display in previous centuries. They were instrumental in creating a new form of urban attention, which was not only based on sounds and spoken langage, but also on visual and written signs. This attention economy caused a change in the printing trade, giving birth to professional bill-stickers or information entrepreneurs. It was also linked to typographic techniques and to street furniture designed to catch the Parisians’ attention and to occupy some city places. In that context, urban authorities took steps to control the walls to challenge the attention-seeking posters. In that respect, the XVIIIth century marks the origin of a long history of poster regulation in France. If today, bill-posting is linked to over-saturated urban landscapes and to alienating advertisements, when considered in the Parisian streets of the Enlightenment and the French Revolution, they reveal how powerful posters were at the time. They were thought of as a device, a deceiving one indeed, but one structuring the urban experience, an educational device allowing to spread information about the rules and the law to as many people as possible, or a medium to get involved in the democratic public sphere which is gaining ground in 1789. This study will analyze the way citizens engage with the city and their use of the public sphere
Rebolledo-Dhuin, Viera. "La librairie et le crédit. Réseaux et métiers du livre à Paris (1830-1870)." Phd thesis, Université de Versailles-Saint Quentin en Yvelines, 2011. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00768969.
Full textDepauw, Jacques. "Spiritualité et pauvreté à Paris au XVIIème siècle." Paris 4, 1994. http://www.theses.fr/1994PA040071.
Full textThe relations between spirituality and the attitudes to the poor are studied with documents such as liturgy, texts of the most published authors, or the most influential, small books perhaps anonymous, sermons, rules and accounts of hospitals, titles of donation. The whole of these documents is used by constitution of series and in a comparative way. The outlime which was chosen is chronological. It begins with the crisis of the parisian catholicism at the begining of the xviith century and continues with the study of a cycle of active spirituality which includes first the edition of widespread texts and individual experiences, then a time of collective action, the traumatic events of the "fronde", and at last a phasis of institutionalisation under the king's authority. Finally, it is a study of the relations between active spirituality and contemplative spirituality, between the composition of the parisian society ant the forms of assistance, between evolution of the communication of the christian message about poverty and social forms of poverties
Damiani, Loïc. "Les avocats parisiens de l'époque mazarine." Paris 4, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004PA040123.
Full textThe lawyers who were registered at the bar of Paris between 1643 and 1661 formed a group of great significance within the "Parlement" (the kingdom's first court of justice). One had to study law and take the oath to become a lawyer. Several hundreds of them were practasing as lawyers, a profession that developped a structure in the middle of the seventeenth century and practice of which has evolved ever since. Their image and réputation, sometimes criticized in literature, were a permanent concern for them. They also expended a lot of effort to progress socially and attempted to take advantage of their profession as a springboard. The study of their riches and living environment show the dynamism of these families. Nurtured on classical culture they intented to find their place in the kingdom's intellectual life. They became a major group in the judicial life of the time thanks to their collections of books, that showed their will to become highly cultured, and their numerous writings. They took part entirely in the great religious, political end literary debates than ran through the France of Louis XIV
Milovanovic, Nicolas. "L'iconographie des grands décors monarchiques (1653-1683) : De la fin de la Fronde à la mort de Colbert." Paris 4, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA040022.
Full textMonarchical french painted ceilings realized between the end of the "Fronde" (1653) and the death of Colbert (1683) are numerous, from the Louvre apartments to the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles. From a formal point of view, there is a triple unification: structural, iconographical and ornamental, with a hierarchy of the subjects and a submission of the ornaments to the themes of the decorations. All programs are founded on metaphor: either enigmatic, when the beholder has an active part to play, or emblematic, when the meaning is given precisely by a text. The meaning remains always part of a system, where the supremacy of the king is related to the benefits the subjects get from it. The careful composing of the iconographical programs implies that the meaning is part of the "esthetic significance" i. E. , that is the part the authors wanted the beholder to perceive on an esthetic level
Courtin, Nicolas. "L’art d’habiter : l’ameublement des hôtels particuliers à Paris au XVIIe siècle." Paris 4, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007PA040190.
Full textUsing a corpus of 24 hôtels and 55 related furniture inventories drawn up between 1610 and 1716, we compare for the first time archives with original buildings, furniture and pictures, in order to understand the way of living in these specific great houses. Layouts are specified, pointing out a real variety of uses. By examining the relations between furniture and architectural envelopes, we highlight the great mobility of objects, and the rise of the notion of decorative coherence. Furniture estimations allow us to present, type by type, the invaluable informations of these first-hand descriptions, updating today’s knowledge of European furniture placed in Paris interiors. This study brings out a great variety in uses, types, materials, colours, and prices, evoking cosy interiors, more or less sumptuous according to one’s taste and choice between public and private spheres
Jimenes, Rémi. "Charlotte Guillard au Soleil d'Or (ca. 1507-1557) : Une carrière typographique." Thesis, Tours, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014TOUR2011.
Full textWidow of Berthold Rembolt first, then of Claude Chevallon, Charlotte Guillard became in 1537 heiress of France's oldest typography workshop. With Charlotte Guillard at its head, the Soleil d'Or managed to monopolise two specific markets, the law texts and the works of the Church Fathers. The purpose of our thesis is to investigate the practical conditions which made these publications possible. It will highlight the material arrangements of the production and selling of those books, and focus at the people who stayed at Charlotte Guillard's side. This will allow us to demonstrate the importance of her relatives at every step of the process, and to show the coexistence of various networks of collaborators who manage to work on a common basis despite, at times, opposite intellectual and ideological motivations. Calling on manuscript archives, physical bibliography, and an analysis of the prefaces and liminary epistles, this monograph allows us to write a holistic history of the intellectual endeavour, taking into account all the ideological, social and economic conditions entering in its construction