Table of Contents

Order Nr. 96655 BOOK TRADE CONNECTIONS FROM THE SEVENTEENTH TO THE TWENTIETH CENTURIES. John...

BOOK TRADE CONNECTIONS FROM THE SEVENTEENTH TO THE TWENTIETH CENTURIES.

Delivered at the Twenty-second Conference on the History of the British Book Trade Birmingham, July 2005
New Castle, Delaware and London, England: Oak Knoll Press and The British Library, 2008. 6 x 9 inches. Hardcover, dust jacket. 281 pages. Delivered at the Twenty-second Conference on the History of the British Book Trade Birmingham, July 2005. First edition. This ninth volume of the Print Networks series contains twelve exciting chapters from scholars working on the connections between the parties involved in the production of print artifacts; from author to printer, publisher, bookseller..... READ MORE

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Table of contents

Introduction........................................vii  

Contributors.........................................xi

JOHN FEATHER..........................................1
Others: Some Reflections on Book Trade History.

ANGELA MCSHANE.......................................19
Typography Matters: Branding Ballads and 
Gelding Curates in Stuart England.

SUSANNAH RANDALL.....................................45
Newspapers and their publishers during the 
Popish Plot and Exclusion Crisis.

VICTORIA GARDNER.....................................71
John White and the Development of Print Culture 
in the North East of England, 1711–1769.

JAMES CAUDLE.........................................93
Young Boswell and the London Stationers: The 
Authorial Collaboration of James Boswell with 
William Flexney, Bookseller and Samuel Chandler, 
Printer, 1763.

STEPHEN BROWN.......................................115
Indians, Politicians, and Profit: the printing 
career of Peter Williamson.

JOHANNA ARCHBOLD....................................137
Periodical Reactions: The effect of the 1798 
Rebellion and the 1800 Act of Union on the Irish 
monthly periodical.

EDDIE CASS..........................................163
The Printing History of The Peace Egg Chapbooks.

PAUL SMITH..........................................183
The Chapbook Mummers Play: Analysing Ephemeral 
Print Traditions.

FRANK FELSENSTEIN...................................205
What Middletown Read: Print Networks in the 
Nineteenth-Century Mid-West.

LISA PETERS.........................................227
‘Welsh Obscurity to Notoriety’ – Lloyd George, 
the Boer War, and the North Wales Press.

ELAINE JACKSON......................................247
Sievier’s Monthly (1909):  Pseudonyms and 
Readership in Early Twentieth Century Popular 
Fiction.