Results for ' papermaking'

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  1.  23
    Socially skilling toil: New artisanship in papermaking in late Chosŏn Korea.Jung Lee - 2019 - History of Science 57 (2):167-193.
    In pre-modern Korea, paper was renowned for its white glossy surface and cloth-like strength, becoming an important item in both tributary exchanges and private trade. The unique material of the tak tree and related technical innovations, including toch’im, the repeated beating of just-produced paper that provides sizing and fulling effects, were crucial to this fame. However, the scholar-officials who integrated papermaking into the state production system in order to meet administrative and tributary needs initially made toch’im corvée and then (...)
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  2.  22
    Ancient American Papermaking.Philip Means - 1944 - Isis 35 (1):13-15.
  3.  29
    Leonard N. Rosenband. Papermaking in Eighteenth‐Century France: Management, Labor, and Revolution at the Montgolfier Mill, 1761–1805. xvi + 210 pp., illus., tables, app., bibl., index. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000. $39.95. [REVIEW]Augustí Nieto-Galan - 2003 - Isis 94 (2):384-385.
  4.  14
    Finding Time for the Old Stone Age: A History of Palaeolithic Archaeology and Quaternary Geology in Britain, 1860-1960.Anne O'Connor - 2007 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Finding Time for the Old Stone Age explores a century of colourful debate over the age of our earliest ancestors. In the mid nineteenth century curious stone implements were found alongside the bones of extinct animals. Humans were evidently more ancient than had been supposed - but just how old were they? There were several clocks for Stone-Age time, and it would prove difficult to synchronize them. Conflicting timescales were drawn from the fields of geology, palaeontology, anthropology, and archaeology. Anne (...)
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  5.  22
    The Perils of Petty Production: Pierre and Jean-Baptiste Serve of Chamalières.Leonard N. Rosenband - 1998 - Science in Context 11 (1):3-21.
    The ArgumentThis essay examines the prospects and plans of a family of small-scale French papermakers, the Serves, from the 1780s to the 1830s. It explores the interplay of risk, the state, labor discipline, and technological diffusion. Pierre Serve petitioned the monarchy, the Revolutionary state, and the Napoleonic regime for a subsidy to install Hollander beaters, a machine that macerated rags, in his shops. His son pursued a law to humble the journeymen paperworkers, whose custom and skill continuously challenged the Serves' (...)
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