1 option
The British publishing industry in the Nineteenth Century. Volume II, Publishing and technologies of production / edited by David Finkelstein and Andrew Nash.
- Format:
- Contributor:
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (xxvi, 430 pages)
- Other Title:
- Publishing and technologies of production
- Place of Publication:
- Abingdon : Routledge, 2024.
- Biography/History:
- Professor David Finkelstein (BA, PhD, FEA, FRHistS, FRSA) is a cultural historian who has published over 90 books, essays and refereed journal articles in areas related to nineteenth-century cultural history, print culture and media history, several of which have won awards. His most recent work includes Movable Types: Roving Creative Printers of the Victorian World (Oxford University Press, 2018), and the 850 page edited Edinburgh History of the British and Irish Press, volume 2: Expansion and Evolution, 1800-1900 (Edinburgh University Press, 2020). Current projects include a co-edited volume on the colonial periodical press, as well as work on print workplaces in Edwardian visual culture. Dr Andrew Nash (MA, MSc, PhD) is Reader in Book History and Deputy Director of the Institute of English Studies in the University of London⁰́₉s School of Advanced Study where he directs the MA in the History of the Book and the London Rare Books School. In addition to monographs on Victorian literature and Scottish literature, he has edited or co-edited many works in the field of book and publishing history including The Culture of Collected Editions (2003), Literary Cultures and the Material Book (2007), New Directions in the History of the Novel (2014) and, most recently, The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, vol. 7: the Twentieth Century and Beyond (2019). He is part of a new Leverhulme-funded research project on the early history of the Society of Authors (2020-24).
- Contents:
-
- Volume 2: Publishing and Technologies of ProductionVolume 2 Introduction BibliographyPart 1. TECHNOLOGIES AND PROCESSESJ. Y. W. MacAlister, ⁰́₈The Durability of Modern Papers⁰́₉, The Library, 1, 10, 1 (1898), pp. 295-304.⁰́₈A Commercial History of a Penny Magazine⁰́₉ (1833) [4-part series] The Penny Magazine, vol 2: ⁰́₈No. 1
- Introduction & Paper-Making" 96 (August 31-September 30, 1833), pp. 377-84; ⁰́₈No. 2. Wood-cutting and Type-founding⁰́₉, 101 (September 30-October 31, 1833), pp. 417-24; ⁰́₈No. 3. Compositors' Work and Stereotyping⁰́₉, 107 (October 31-November 30, 1833), pp. 465-72; ⁰́₈No. 4. Printing Presses and Machinery⁰́₄Bookbinding⁰́₉, 112 (November 30-December 31, 1833), pp. 505-11.⁰́₈Mechanism of Chambers⁰́₉s Journal⁰́₉, Chambers⁰́₉s Edinburgh Journal, 3, 175 (6 June 1835), pp. 149⁰́₃51.William Andrew Chatto, ⁰́₈Wood-Engraving, its History and Practice⁰́₉, Illustrated London News (April 20, 1844), pp. 251-4; Supplement, pp. 257-9; April 27, 1844, pp. 273-4; May 4, 1844, pp. 293-4; May 11, 1844, pp. 309-310; May 18, 1844, pp. 325-6; June 1, 1844, pp. 357-8; June 22, 1844, pp.405-6; June 29, 1844, p. 417; July 6, 1844, p. 425. C. H. Timperley, ⁰́₈Directions to Pressmen: of Presses⁰́₉, from The printers⁰́₉ manual containing instructions to learners with scales of impositions, and numerous calculations, recipes, and scales of prices in the principal towns of Great Britain together with practical directions for conducting every department of a printing office (London: H. Johnson, etc., 1838), pp. 89-94.John Jamieson, ⁰́₈On Printing Machinery⁰́₉, Cowen Tracts, Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers (1865), pp. 1-13.⁰́₈The Mechanism of the Wharfedale⁰́₉ British Printer, XV (Jan-Feb, 1902), p. 49.C. H. Timperley, ⁰́₈Hand Typesetting⁰́₉, from, The printers⁰́₉ manual containing instructions to learners with scales of impositions, and numerous calculations, recipes, and scales of prices in the principal towns of Great Britain together with practical directions for conducting every department of a printing office (London: H. Johnson, etc., 1838), pp. 12-18.⁰́₈The Monotype⁰́₉, The Graphic (6 November 1897), p. 7.⁰́₈The Linotype Machine: What it Does and How it Works⁰́₉, Journal of the American Society for Naval Engineers (Feb 1900), pp. 208-211.⁰́₈Linotype Reading⁰́₉, British Printer 16 (1903), p. 232⁰́₈A Multiface Linotype Machine⁰́₉, Scientific American (8 August 1903), p. 97.Part 2. PREMISES⁰́₈Destruction of the Caxton Printing-office by Fire⁰́₉, Imperial Magazine, 3 (1821), pp. 243-52.⁰́₈Inside a Printing Office I⁰́₉, The Leisure Hour: A Family Journal of Instruction and Recreation (London) 12, 576 (3 January 1863), 13⁰́₃15.⁰́₈Inside a Printing Office II⁰́₉, The Leisure Hour: A Family Journal of Instruction and Recreation (London) 12, 576 (10 January 1863), 28⁰́₃31.⁰́₈The Newspaper Printing Office⁰́₉, The Leisure Hour: A Family Journal of Instruction and Recreation (London) 12, 579 (31 January 1863), pp. 76⁰́₃8.⁰́₈A Modern Printing Works⁰́₉, [Manchester Guardian] British Printer, XV (November-December 1902), pp. 277-82.⁰́₈A Description of the Offices of the Strand Magazine⁰́₉, The Strand Magazine, 4 (December 1892), pp. 594-606.⁰́₈The "Daily Graphic" ⁰́₃ How it is Done (From the Supplement to the "Graphic" Christmas Number.)⁰́₉ British Printer, V (1892), Jan-Feb, p. 8.John Southward, ⁰́₈Progress in Book Printing⁰́₉, from Progress in Printing and the Graphic Arts during the Victorian Era (London: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co Ltd, 1897), pp. 18-22.Part 3. WORKING PRACTICES⁰́₈The Printer⁰́₉s Apprentice⁰́₉, The Penny Magazine (11 August 1838), pp. 306-8.Francis Bond Head, ⁰́₈The Printer⁰́₉s Devil⁰́₉, The Quarterly Review, 65, 129 (December 1838), pp 1⁰́₃30.⁰́₈A Few Words to Our Readers⁰́₉, Chambers⁰́₉ Edinburgh Journal, New Series, vol. III, no. 53 (4 January 1845), pp. 1-3.H. Ashton, ⁰́₈How to Succeed as a Printer⁰́₉, British Printer, VII (Jan-Feb 1895), pp. 17-19.⁰́₈Some Notes on Compositors⁰́₉, The Leisure Hour: A Family Journal of Instruction and Recreation (London) (17 January 1860), pp. 37⁰́₃40.⁰́₈The Printers⁰́₉ Chapel⁰́₉, The Leisure Hour: A Family Journal of Instruction and Recreation (London) (24 January 1863), pp. 62⁰́₃4. ⁰́₈How Macaulay⁰́₉s History was Bound⁰́₉, The Leisure Hour: A Family Journal of Instruction and Recreation (London) (31 January 1856), pp. 72-4.⁰́₈The Printing and Binding of the Revised Bible⁰́₉, The Leisure Hour: A Family Journal of Instruction and Recreation (August 1885), pp. 543-6.Frederick Saunders, The author⁰́₉s printing and publishing assistant, comprising explanations of the process of printing preparation ⁰́Œ (London: Saunders & Otley, 1839), pp 1-60.The Author⁰́₉s Handbook: a complete guide to the art and system of publishing on commission (London: E Churton, Commission Publishers, 1844).C. Kegan Paul, ⁰́₈The Production and Life of Books⁰́₉,Fortnightly Review (April 1883), pp. 485-99.Emily Hill, ⁰́₈What Can Our Daughters Do for a Living?⁰́₉, Women⁰́₉s Penny Paper, 8.195 (23 September 1897), p. 198.L. Barbara Brady and Anne Black, ⁰́₈Women Compositors and the Factory Acts⁰́₉, The Economic Journal, 9, 34 (June 1899), pp. 261-6.⁰́₈The Trades Described⁰́₉ and ⁰́₈Women⁰́₉s Work and Organisation⁰́₉, from J. Ramsay Macdonald (ed.), Women in the Printing Trades: A Sociological Study (London, 1904), pp. 1-16, 24-43.Charles Manby Smith, extract from The Working-man⁰́₉s Way in the World: being the autobiography of a journeyman printer (London, 1853), pp. 283-97.Andrew Aird, Letter Press Printing in Glasgow During the Last 50 Years (Glasgow: Privately Printed, 1882), pp. 5-10.Index
- Notes:
- Electronic reproduction. London Available via World Wide Web.
- ISBN:
-
- 9781003099598
- 1003099599
- 9781003823612
- 1003823610
- Publisher Number:
-
- 40032348441
- 9781003099598
- Access Restriction:
- Restricted for use by site license.
The Penn Libraries is committed to describing library materials using current, accurate, and responsible language. If you discover outdated or inaccurate language, please fill out this feedback form to report it and suggest alternative language.