Vietnam: A Revolution in Crisis
In: Asian survey, Band 27, Heft 9, S. 973-990
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In: Asian survey, Band 27, Heft 9, S. 973-990
ISSN: 1533-838X
In: Asian survey: a bimonthly review of contemporary Asian affairs, Band 27, Heft 9, S. 973-990
ISSN: 0004-4687
World Affairs Online
During the course of the nineteenth century, the British publishing industry was transformed as the related commercial, technological and legal structures changed rapidly. This four-volume collection brings together contemporary source material that charts these changes, and explores some of the key contexts and debates of the period
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
Volume 1: The Structure of the IndustryGeneral IntroductionVolume 1 IntroductionBibliographyPart 1 ⁰́₃ THE OPERATION OF THE TRADE IN EARLY AND MID CENTURY ⁰́₈Regulations Governing the Issue of Trade Books⁰́₉ (1828), in Joseph Shaylor, The Fascination of Books (London: Simpkin Marshall Hamilton Kent & Co., 1912), pp. 165-8.Samuel Smiles, A Publisher and His Friends: Memoir and Correspondence of the late John Murray (London: John Murray, 1891), Vol. 1, pp. 170-5, 185-8, 195-8.⁰́₈On the Crisis of 1825-6⁰́₉, Morning Chronicle, 30 Nov 1825, in Archibald Constable and his Literary Correspondence (London: Edmonston and Douglas, 1873), vol. III, pp. 477-8.[Francis Barry Boyle St Leger], ⁰́₈The Book-Trade⁰́₉, Monthly Magazine (July 1826), pp. 17-24.⁰́₈Booksellers and Authors⁰́₉, Literary Magnet (July 1826), pp. 65-74.Charles Babbage, On the Economy of Machinery and Manufactures (1832; 4th edn, London: Charles Knight, 1835), pp. 205-10, 315-33. G.P.R. James, Some Observations on The Book Trade, as Connected with Literature, in England⁰́₉, Journal of the Statistical Society of London, 6: 1 (1843), 50-60William Chambers, 'The Book Trade', Chambers' Cyclopaedia (1859), pp. 228-38Part 2. LEGAL CONTROLS Report from the Committee on Booksellers and Printers Petition (1802), pp. 3-15John Crawfurd, Taxes on Knowledge: A Financial and Historical View of the Taxes (London: Charles Ely, 1836), pp. 14-23.Charles Knight, The Struggles of a Book against Excessive Taxation (London, 1850). ⁰́₈Thomas Norton Longman⁰́₉s Evidence to the Select Committee on Acts for the Encouragement of Learning⁰́₉, from Minutes of Evidence Taken Before the Committee on Acts of 8 Anne, and 15 & 41 Geo. III For the Encouragement of Learning, By vesting the Copies of Printed Books, in the Authors or Purchasers of such copies (1813), pp. 3-15.[John George] Cochrane, The Case Stated Between the Public Libraries and the Booksellers (London: J. Moyes, 1813), pp. 3-32⁰́₈Publishers and Museum Library⁰́₉, Critic (3 December 1859), pp. 17-18.Letters published in the Times, 8-16 February 1898 [Letters from Edward Marston (8 Feb); Herbert Spencer (10 Feb); W.E.H. Lecky (11 Feb); Times report on the correspondence (12 Feb) letters from Spencer (16 Feb); Marston (16 Feb)]. Part 3. DISTRIBUTIONJoseph Shaylor, ⁰́₈Booksellers⁰́₉ Trade Dinner Sales⁰́₉, Fortnightly Review (Dec 1907), pp. 1031-39.⁰́₈Mr Murray's Trade Sale', Critic (26 Nov 1859), pp. 11-12⁰́₈Bentley⁰́₉s Trade Sale⁰́₉, Bookseller (7 November 1888), p. 1237.James Grant, ⁰́₈Mr Thomas Tegg⁰́₉, in Portrait of Public Characters (London: Saunders & Otley, 1841), pp. 24-46.⁰́₈Abstract of Evidence by Charles Knight, G.B. Whitaker, and J.W. Parker to the Select Committee on Postage⁰́₉, from Third Report of the Select Committee on Postage, together with an abstract of the evidence (1838), pp. 30-37. ⁰́₈Charles Knight⁰́₉s Evidence to the Select Committee on Conveyance of Mail by Railways⁰́₉, from Report from the Select Committee on Conveyance of Mails by Railways (1854), pp. 360-7.James Grant, ⁰́₈Bookselling: Paternoster Row⁰́₉, in Travels in Town, 2 vols (London: Saunders & Otley, 1839), Vol. II: pp. 69-88.Joseph Shaylor, ⁰́₈On the Selling of Books⁰́₉, Nineteenth Century (December 1896), pp. 937-43. ⁰́₈Booksellers of To-day: Messrs Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co. Ltd⁰́₉, Publishers⁰́₉ Circular (11 May 1895), pp. 514-16. (images to be removed)Part 4. PUBLISHERS AND BOOKSELLERS: THE DISCOUNT QUESTION TO 1868 ⁰́₈The Book-Trade⁰́₉, Morning Post (31 Dec 1829).William Pickering, Booksellers' Monopoly (London, 1832).John Chapman, ⁰́₈The Commerce of Literature⁰́₉, Westminster Review (April 1852), pp. 529-552. ⁰́₈Civil War in the Book Trade⁰́₉, Spectator (3 April 1852), pp. 321-2. John Chapman, ⁰́₈A Reply to the Arguments Adduced in Support of the Booksellers Association⁰́₉, in Report of the Proceedings of a meeting (consisting chiefly of authors), held May 4th at the house of John Chapmen ⁰́Œ (1852), pp. 17-24⁰́₈The Bookselling System⁰́₉, selected correspondence to the Times, March-May 1852. Reprinted in Publishers and the Public: reprinted from the Times of 1852 (1906), pp. 3-5; 6-8; 11-13 (letter from Bickers and Bush); 23-24 (letter from Clericus); 24-28 (from the Times of April 16, 1852); 28-29 (letter from Educator); 38-44 (from the Times of May 18, 1852); 53-56 (from the Times of May 21, 1852); 63-66 (from the Times of May 31, 1852). The Book Trades', Athenaeum (22 May 1852), pp. 575-7.[J.W. Parker], 'The Makers, Sellers and Buyers of Books', Frasers' Magazine (June 1852), 711-24.Thomas Bosworth, On Rattening in the Book Trade (London: Thomas Bosworth, 1868), pp. 1-8.⁰́₈Mr Bosworth and the Book Trade⁰́₉, Bookseller (1 April 1868), pp. 217-18.Letter from Alexander Macmillan to W.E. Gladstone (10 April 1868), from Charles L. Graves, Life and Letters of Alexander Macmillan (London: Macmillan & Co., 1910), pp. 286-8.Part 5. THE NET BOOK SYSTEM Frederick Macmillan, ⁰́₈A Remedy for Underselling⁰́₉, Bookseller (6 March 1890), p. 244. ⁰́₈A Remedy for Underselling⁰́₉, Bookseller (6 March 1890), p. 241.⁰́₈Is the Discount System Doomed? Answers of the Leading London Booksellers⁰́₉, Pall Mall Gazette (12 March 1890), pp. 1-2.⁰́₈Is the Discount System Doomed? The Bitter Cry of the Country Bookseller⁰́₉, Pall Mall Gazette (14 March 1890), pp. 1-2.⁰́₈Is the Discount System Doomed? The Attitude of the Publishing World⁰́₉, Pall Mall Gazette (17 March 1890), pp. 1-2.⁰́₈A Symposium on Discounts⁰́₉, St James⁰́₉s Budget, 2 November 1894, pp. 10-11. (REMOVE IMAGES)⁰́₈Publishers and the Public⁰́₉, The Speaker (10 November 1894), pp. 513-14.David Stott, ⁰́₈The Decay of Bookselling⁰́₉, Nineteenth Century (Dec 1894), pp. 332-8.⁰́₈The Publishers Association and the Discount Question⁰́₉, [Speeches by C. J. Longman and Frederick Macmillan to the Publishers⁰́₉ Association], Publishers' Circular (3 July 1897), pp. 7-9. ⁰́₈News Notes⁰́₉, Bookman (August 1897), pp. 109-11. [Z], ⁰́₈Shall the Publishers Coerce the Booksellers?⁰́₉, Bookman (August 1897), pp. 115-18Letters from Alfred Nutt and ⁰́₈Y⁰́₉, Bookman (September 1897), pp. 150-2.Robert Maclehose, The Report of the Society of Authors on the Discount Question: A Criticism (Glasgow: J. Maclehose and Sons, 1897), pp. 3-22. Selected articles and correspondence in the Times published under ⁰́₈Authors, Publishers, and Booksellers⁰́₉, 9-15 November 1897. [Original article, 9 November; letters from E. Marston and Robert Maclehose, 10 November; letters from the Editor of the Bookseller and Skeffington & Son, 11 November; letter from W. Day, 12 November; letters from The Writer of the Article; A Member of the Publishers⁰́₉ Association; Mr J.B. Baddeley; A Country Bookseller; Publishers⁰́₉ Reader, 15 November; ⁰́₈The bitter cry of the retail bookseller ⁰́Œ⁰́₉, 15 November]. John A. Steuart, ⁰́₈Authors, Publishers and Booksellers⁰́₉, Fortnightly Review (February 1898), pp. 255-63. Index
Volume 3: Authors, Publishers and Copyright LawVolume 3 IntroductionBibliographyPart 1. AUTHORS, PUBLISHERS AND AGENTS⁰́₈Books, Booksellers and Bookmakers⁰́₉, London Magazine, Vol. 10 (February 1828), pp. 254-60.⁰́₈Authors and Publishers⁰́₉, The New Quarterly Review and Digest of Current Literature, British, American, French, and German (January 1854), pp. 9-17.⁰́₈Introduction⁰́₉, The Search for a Publisher; or, Counsels for a Young Author (1855; London: Provost & Co., repr. 1882), pp. 3-19.James Spedding, Publishers and Authors (London: Printed for the Author by John Russell Smith, 1867), pp. 1-55.⁰́₈An Interview with Mr A.P. Watt⁰́₉, Bookman (October 1892), pp. 20-2.William Heinemann, ⁰́₈The Middleman as Viewed by a Publisher⁰́₉, Athenaeum (11 November 1893), p. 663T. Werner Laurie, ⁰́₈Author, Agent, and Publisher by one of "The Trade"⁰́₉, Nineteenth Century (November 1895), pp. 890-5.Walter Besant, 'The Literary Agent', Nineteenth Century (December 1895), 979-86.Robert Buchanan, Is Barabbas a Necessity? A Discourse on Publishers and Publishing (London: Robert Buchanan, Author & Publisher, 1896), pp. 3-31.Part 2. AUTHORS, PUBLISHERS AND COPYRIGHT LAWRobert Maugham, extract from A Treatise on the Law of Literary Property (London and Edinburgh: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green; Henry Dixon; Adam Black, 1828), pp. vii-xviii. ⁰́₈The Copy-Right Law⁰́₉, Monthly Review (January 1838), pp. 52-63.W. and R. Chambers, ⁰́₈Brief Objections to Mr Talfourd⁰́₉s New Copyright Bill⁰́₉, Times (25 April 1838), p. 3.Letter from Robert Chambers to the Times (18 May 1838), p. 3.⁰́₈New Copyright Bill⁰́₉, Times (31 May 1838), p. 4.[Routledge v Low], ⁰́₈Literary and Musical Copyright⁰́₉, Athenaeum (16 December 1865), pp. 845-6.John Camden Hotten, extracts from Literary Copyright: Seven Letters Addressed by Permission to the Right Hon. The Earl Stanhope (London: John Camden Hotten, 1871), pp. 15-46, 91-102, 135-55 Matthew Arnold, ⁰́₈Copyright⁰́₉, Fortnightly Review (March 1880), 319-34.Edward Marston, extract from Copyright, National and International: with some remarks on the position of authors and publishers by a publisher (London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington, 1887), pp. 5-44.Charles James Longman, ⁰́₈A Publisher⁰́₉s View of International Copyright⁰́₉, Fraser⁰́₉s Magazine (March 1881), pp. 372-8.Wilkie Collins, ⁰́₈Thou Shalt Not Steal⁰́₉, Author 2 (June 1890), pp. 31-5.C. J. Longman, ⁰́₈The American Copyright Bill⁰́₉, Economic Review (April 1891), pp. 203-8.G. Herbert Thring, ⁰́₈Recent Attempts at Copyright Legislation⁰́₉, Fortnightly Review (March 1898), pp. 461-7.Augustine Birrell, ⁰́₈The Present Situation⁰́₉, in Seven Lectures on the Law and History of Copyright in Books (London: Cassell & Co., 1899), pp. 205-23.Part 3. PUBLISHERS AND THE SOCIETY OF AUTHORSExtracts from The Grievances Between Authors and Publishers. Being the Report of the Conferences of the Incorporated Society of Authors held at Willis⁰́₉s Rooms, in March 1887 with Additional Matter and Summary (London: Field & Tuer; Simpkin, Marshall & Co., Hamilton, Adams & Co., 1887), pp. 7-46, 52-61, 127-85.⁰́₈The Mysteries of Publishing: An Interview with Messrs Chatto and Windus⁰́₉, Pall Mall Gazette (9 March 1887), pp. 1-2.J. Neville Porter, ⁰́₈The Relations Between Authors and Publishers⁰́₉, Time (1887), pp. 399-411.⁰́₈Archdeacon Farrar and the Publishers⁰́₉, correspondence from the Times, 7-14 October 1890. [Letter from J. Russell Endean, 7 October; letters from F.W. Farrar and Cassell and Company, 8 October; letters from Walter Besant, F.W. Farrar and J Russell Endean, 9 October); letter from Andrew W. Tuer, 10 October; letters from An Author, Harry Quilter, and E. Marston, 11 October; letters from Walter Besant, S.S. Sprigge, and Facing Both Ways, 13 October; letters from George Lock and Andrew W. Tuer, 14 October]. Extracts from William Heinemann (ed.), The Hardships of Publishing: Letters to ⁰́₈The Athenaeum⁰́₉ (London: Privately Printed, 1893), pp. 3-28; 30-32; 42-57; 59-62; 95-113. Walter Besant, extracts from The Pen and the Book (London: Thomas Burleigh, 1899), pp. 145-86, 200-13.⁰́₈Am I a Thief? A Publisher⁰́₉s Reply to Sir Walter Besant⁰́₉, article and correspondence published in Outlook (Original article, 14 January; Letters by Walter Besant, Another Publisher, Thomas Pinkerton, 21 January; Letter by Another Publisher, 28 January; Letters by A Publisher, A London Bookseller, 11 February 1899). Index
Volume 4: Publishers, Markets, ReadersVolume 4 IntroductionBibliographyPart 1. THE PRICE OF BOOKS Charles Knight, The Old Printer and the Modern Press (London: John Murray, 1854), pp. 238-58. ⁰́₈Literature for the People⁰́₉, Times (9 Feb 1854), p. 10.⁰́₈Cheap Books and their Readers: An Interview with Mr Routledge⁰́₉, Pall Mall Gazette (19 Nov 1885), pp. 1-2.⁰́₈Shilling Literature⁰́₉, Time (July 1885), 115-7. ⁰́₈The New Departure in Publishing: A Six-shilling Novel for Sixpence⁰́₉, Publishers⁰́₉ Circular (13 May 1899), pp. 519-20. A.D. Innes, ⁰́₈The Production and Purchase of Books⁰́₉. Paper delivered to the Third International Congress of Publishers, London 7-10 June 1899 (London : Printed for the Organising Committee by Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1899). ⁰́₈The Booksellers on the Question of Cheaper Books⁰́₉, Academy (21 May 1898), 558-9.Wm Laird Clowes, ⁰́₈The Cheapening of Useful Books⁰́₉, Fortnightly Review (July 1901), 88-98.W. T. Stead, ⁰́₈The World⁰́₉s Classics; or Bound Books for the Million⁰́₉, Review of Reviews (November 1901), 544-6. Part 2. THE CIRCULATION OF BOOKS James Grant, extract from The Great Metropolis, second series (London: Saunders and Otley, 1837), I, pp. 121-40.Charles Knight, extract from The Old Printer and the Modern Press (London: John Murray, 1854), pp. 260-9. ⁰́₈The Circulation of Modern Literature⁰́₉, Spectator (3 Jan 1863), pp. 16-18.⁰́₈The Publications of a Year⁰́₉, Leisure Hour (21 March 1863), 190-2.Walter Montagu Gattie, ⁰́₈What English People Read⁰́₉, Fortnightly Review (September 1889), 307-21.Joseph Ackland, ⁰́₈Elementary Education and the Decay of Literature⁰́₉, Nineteenth Century (March 1894), pp. 412-23.⁰́₈Do English People Buy Books?⁰́₉ The Author, 1 (16 March 1891), pp. 288-91. Part 3. POPULAR PUBLISHING AND READING Thomas Frost, ⁰́₈Popular Literature Forty Years Ago⁰́₉, in Forty Years Recollections (London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, and Rivington, 1880), pp. 77-95.Charles Manby Smith, ⁰́₈The Press of the Seven Dials⁰́₉, Chambers⁰́₉s Journal (28 June 1856), pp. 401-5.Report of the Select Committee on Newspaper Stamps (1851), pp. 371-80. ⁰́₈Literature of the People-Past and Present⁰́₉, Athenaeum (1 January 1870), pp. 11-14. William Alexander, ⁰́₈Literature of the People ⁰́₃ Past and Present⁰́₉, Good Words (Dec 1876), pp. 92-6.[Francis Hitchman], ⁰́₈Penny Fiction⁰́₉, Quarterly Review (July 1890), pp. 150-71. Part 4. RAILWAY BOOKSTALLS [⁰́₈The New Business in Bookselling⁰́₉], Athenaeum (27 January 1849), p. 95.Literature of the Rail: Re-published, by permission, from "The Times" of Saturday 9th August 1851, with a preface (London: John Murray, 1851).⁰́₈Railroad Bookselling⁰́₉, Saturday Review (31 January 1857), pp. 100-2.⁰́₈Our Modern Mercury⁰́₉, Once a Week (2 February 1861), pp. 160-3.⁰́₈W.H. Smith & Son⁰́₉s⁰́₉, Ludgate Monthly (January 1892), pp. 161-9.⁰́₈The Harmsworth Magazine: Some Interviews⁰́₉, Academy (16 July 1898), pp. 67-8⁰́₈The Bookstall Monopoly⁰́₉, Graphic (23 July 1898), p. 58. Part 5. PERIODICAL MARKETS ⁰́₈The Edinburgh Review (1802-1902)⁰́₉, Edinburgh Review, CCCCII (October 1902), pp. 275-80; 284-86, 287-91, 295-96.⁰́₉Publishing and Puffing⁰́₉, Metropolitan Magazine (Oct 1833), 171-8.[Christian Isobel Johnstone], ⁰́₈Johnstone⁰́₉s Edinburgh Magazine⁰́₉, Tait⁰́₉s Edinburgh Magazine (January 1834), pp. 490-500. ⁰́₈Chambers⁰́₉s Edinburgh Journal⁰́₉, Chambers⁰́₉s Edinburgh Journal (1 February 1834), pp. 1-2. George M. Smith, ⁰́₈Our Birth and Parentage⁰́₉, Cornhill Magazine (January 1901), pp. 4-17. William Westall, ⁰́₈Newspaper Fiction⁰́₉, Lippincott's Monthly Magazine (June 1890), pp. 77-88. ⁰́₈Popular Magazines, Circulating Libraries, and the Sale of Books⁰́₉, Bookman (June 1898), pp. 67-70.Part 6. CIRCULATING LIBRARIES AND THE FICTION MARKET Charles Knight, extract from The Old Printer and the Modern Press (London: John Murray, 1854), pp. 229-34.Catherine Gore, 'The Monster Misery of Literature', Blackwood's Magazine (May 1844), pp. 556-60.⁰́₈New and Cheap Forms of Popular Literature⁰́₉, Eclectic Review (July 1845), pp. 74-84.⁰́₈Mudie's Library⁰́₉, Leisure Hour (March 1886), pp. 187-9. William C. Preston, ⁰́₈Mudie's Library⁰́₉, Good Words (December 1894), pp. 668-76⁰́₈Mr Mudie's Monopoly⁰́₉, Literary Gazette (29 September 1860), article and selected subsequent correspondence. [Original article, 29 September; letter from Mudie to the Athenaeum, 6 October; letter from ⁰́₈Z⁰́₉, 6 October; letter from Fair Play, 20 October; letter from ⁰́₈Senex⁰́₉, 27 October; ⁰́₈Mudie⁰́₉s Library⁰́₉, Saturday Review, 3 November; letters from Saunders, Otley and A Second-Rate Author, 17 November; letter from Charles J. Skeet, 24 November]. ⁰́₈A Novel ⁰́₃ One Guinea and a Half⁰́₉, Saturday Review (11 November 1871), pp. 615-16. Samuel Tinsley, ⁰́₈Three-Volume Novels⁰́₉, letter to the Times (4 December 1871). ⁰́₈On the Forms of Publishing Fiction⁰́₉, Tinsley's Magazine (May 1872), pp. 411-14.Alexander Innes Shand, ⁰́₈The Novelists and their Patrons⁰́₉, Fortnightly Review (July 1886), pp. 23-35.⁰́₈The Circulating Libraries and Three-Volume Novels⁰́₉, Publishers' Circular (7 July 1894), pp. 5, 7-8⁰́₈The Three-Volume Novel⁰́₉, The Author 5:3 (1 August 1894), pp. 63-5.Part 7. OBSCENITY LAW AND THE BOOK TRADE Extract from ⁰́₈Second Reading in the House of Lords of the Sale of Obscene Books Prevention Bill⁰́₉, Hansard, HL vol. 146 (25 June 1857), cols 329-337. The Case of ⁰́₈The Confessional Unmasked⁰́₉. Being a Report of the Proceedings at Wolverhampton, and in the Court of Queen⁰́₉s Bench, in the Matter of the Appeal ⁰́₈Scott v. Justices of Wolverhampton⁰́₉ (London: A. Gadsby, 1868), pp. 36-48.Extract from The National Vigilance Association, Pernicious Literature. Debate in the House of Commons. Trial and conviction for sale of Zola's novels. With opinions of the press (London: National Vigilance Association, [1889]), pp. 5-19.Index
This volume brings together key documents covering technologies of production that affected the British publishing industry during a significant period of change. It focuses in particular on key source material related to industrialisation of print production
This volume assembles documents that illustrate the changing structure of the British publishing industry in the nineteenth century. It charts the increasing separation of the functions of printing, publishing and retailing in the production and distribution of books, and the emergence of new economic models of publishing
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Examines civil-military relations in China. Reflects the significant changes taking place in Chinese society and their impact on the civil-military dynamic, with particular attention to how the military will fit in with the new class of entrepreneurs.