In:Cultural Participation: Trends since the Middle Ages
Edited by Ann Rigney and Douwe W. Fokkema †
[Utrecht Publications in General and Comparative Literature 31] 1993
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 8 July 1993
https://doi.org/10.1075/upal.31.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/upal.31.toc
Table of contents
The Benefits of Clergie: Laymen and Clerics as Participants in the Literary Culture of the Low Countries around 130013
The Uses of the Past (14th-16th Centuries): The Invention of a Collective History and Its Implications for Cultural Participation21
Cultural Participation as Stimulated by the Seventeenth-Century Reformed Church39
The Ability to Select: The Growth of the Reading Public and the Problem of Literary Socialization in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries51
Creating an Instrument of Cultural Transmission: Primary-School Education in the Netherlands, 1800–190063
The Increasing Autonomy of Literary Institutions in Belgium in the Late Nineteenth Century125
Cultural Inequalities in Cross-national Perspective: A Secondary Analysis of Survey Data for the 1980s173
The Gentrification of a Rearguard: An Attempt to Explain Changes in the Extent and Composition of the Arts Public in the Age of Television193
The Text-analytical Study of Art Criticism: A Model for Establishing the Complexity and Specificity of Cultural Communication217
Contributors251
Index255
