The Development History of Engraving Books in the Ming Dynasty
Introduction: The development of book printing in the Ming Dynasty went through a long process of accumulation and evolution. During the Song and Yuan dynasties, woodblock printing technology was already quite mature, laying the foundation for the prosperity of woodblock printing in the Ming dynasty...
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Xi W.; Hamidon N.A.; Din N.H.; Tao D.H. |
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Xi W.; Hamidon N.A.; Din N.H.; Tao D.H. 2-s2.0-85219352416 The Development History of Engraving Books in the Ming Dynasty 2025 Journal of Information Systems Engineering and Management 10 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85219352416&partnerID=40&md5=77374cf374a0bf124ae65a64e75db592 Introduction: The development of book printing in the Ming Dynasty went through a long process of accumulation and evolution. During the Song and Yuan dynasties, woodblock printing technology was already quite mature, laying the foundation for the prosperity of woodblock printing in the Ming dynasty. In the early Ming Dynasty, rulers attached great importance to culture and education, advocated the imperial examination system, and greatly stimulated the demand for books. At the same time, the economic recovery and urban prosperity have provided a vast market and sufficient financial support for the book publishing industry. Under the combined influence of these factors, the book printing of the Ming Dynasty ushered in a golden age. Objectives: This study takes the book carving industry in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) as the core research object, comprehensively examining the technological evolution, regional distribution, and social impact of the three major systems of official carving, private carving, and chamber carving. Through the methods of literature review, physical comparison, and interdisciplinary analysis, this study systematically examines the development of Ming Dynasty book carving, and combines existing first-hand materials such as Ming engraved editions, novels, and literati notes to focus on exploring the interactive relationship between the innovation of woodblock printing technology, the formation of commercial publishing networks, and the transformation of knowledge dissemination models. Methods: Through literature review, physical comparison, and interdisciplinary analysis. Results: Research has found that the book carving industry in the Ming Dynasty presented a spatial pattern of "prosperity in the south and gradual decline in the north", with Jianyang, Jinling and other places relying on waterway transportation to form a cross regional industrial chain; Although movable type printing did not become mainstream, it promoted the popularization and dissemination of popular literature and imperial examination books; The phenomenon of the convergence of scholars and merchants has given rise to a new publishing model of "nurturing commerce through literature. Conclusions: This article aims to reveal the historical function of the book carving industry as a carrier of cultural power, and to fill the gap of existing research that focuses on version studies and neglects the dimension of social history. Future research can combine digital humanities technology to construct a database of Ming Dynasty engraved books, deepen the comparative study of technology dissemination paths, and provide a new analytical framework for the history of East Asian Han book circulation. Copyright © 2024 by Author/s and Licensed by JISEM. IADITI - International Association for Digital Transformation and Technological Innovation 24684376 English Article |
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2-s2.0-85219352416 |
spellingShingle |
2-s2.0-85219352416 The Development History of Engraving Books in the Ming Dynasty |
author_facet |
2-s2.0-85219352416 |
author_sort |
2-s2.0-85219352416 |
title |
The Development History of Engraving Books in the Ming Dynasty |
title_short |
The Development History of Engraving Books in the Ming Dynasty |
title_full |
The Development History of Engraving Books in the Ming Dynasty |
title_fullStr |
The Development History of Engraving Books in the Ming Dynasty |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Development History of Engraving Books in the Ming Dynasty |
title_sort |
The Development History of Engraving Books in the Ming Dynasty |
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2025 |
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Journal of Information Systems Engineering and Management |
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10 |
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https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85219352416&partnerID=40&md5=77374cf374a0bf124ae65a64e75db592 |
description |
Introduction: The development of book printing in the Ming Dynasty went through a long process of accumulation and evolution. During the Song and Yuan dynasties, woodblock printing technology was already quite mature, laying the foundation for the prosperity of woodblock printing in the Ming dynasty. In the early Ming Dynasty, rulers attached great importance to culture and education, advocated the imperial examination system, and greatly stimulated the demand for books. At the same time, the economic recovery and urban prosperity have provided a vast market and sufficient financial support for the book publishing industry. Under the combined influence of these factors, the book printing of the Ming Dynasty ushered in a golden age. Objectives: This study takes the book carving industry in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) as the core research object, comprehensively examining the technological evolution, regional distribution, and social impact of the three major systems of official carving, private carving, and chamber carving. Through the methods of literature review, physical comparison, and interdisciplinary analysis, this study systematically examines the development of Ming Dynasty book carving, and combines existing first-hand materials such as Ming engraved editions, novels, and literati notes to focus on exploring the interactive relationship between the innovation of woodblock printing technology, the formation of commercial publishing networks, and the transformation of knowledge dissemination models. Methods: Through literature review, physical comparison, and interdisciplinary analysis. Results: Research has found that the book carving industry in the Ming Dynasty presented a spatial pattern of "prosperity in the south and gradual decline in the north", with Jianyang, Jinling and other places relying on waterway transportation to form a cross regional industrial chain; Although movable type printing did not become mainstream, it promoted the popularization and dissemination of popular literature and imperial examination books; The phenomenon of the convergence of scholars and merchants has given rise to a new publishing model of "nurturing commerce through literature. Conclusions: This article aims to reveal the historical function of the book carving industry as a carrier of cultural power, and to fill the gap of existing research that focuses on version studies and neglects the dimension of social history. Future research can combine digital humanities technology to construct a database of Ming Dynasty engraved books, deepen the comparative study of technology dissemination paths, and provide a new analytical framework for the history of East Asian Han book circulation. Copyright © 2024 by Author/s and Licensed by JISEM. |
publisher |
IADITI - International Association for Digital Transformation and Technological Innovation |
issn |
24684376 |
language |
English |
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Article |
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scopus |
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Scopus |
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1828987858100158464 |