British Literature and Print Culture
Title Details

239 Pages

21.6 x 13.8 cm

4 colour, 40 b/w illus.

Series: Essays and Studies

Series Vol. Number: 66

Imprint: D.S.Brewer

British Literature and Print Culture

Edited by Sandro Jung

  • Description
  • Contents
  • Reviews
The complexity of print culture in Britain between the seventeenth and nineteenth century is investigated in these wide-ranging articles.

The essays collected here offer examinations of bibliographical matters, publishing practices, the illustration of texts in a variety of engraved media, little studied print culture genres, the critical and editorial fortunes of individual works, and the significance of the complex interrelationships that authors entertained with booksellers, publishers, and designers. They investigate how all these relationships affected the production of print commodities and how all the agents involved in the making of books contributed to the cultural literacy of readers and the formation of a canon of literary texts. Specific topics include a bibliographical study of Aphra Behn's Oroonoko and its editions from its first publication to the present day; the illustrations of John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress and the ways in which the interpretive matrices of book illustration conditioned the afterlife and reception of Bunyan's work; the almanac and the subscription edition; publishing history, collecting, reading, and textual editing, especially of Robert Burns's poems and James Thomson's The Seasons; the "printing for the author" practice; the illustrated and material existence of Sir Walter Scott's Waverley novels, and the Victorian periodical, The Athenaeum.

Sandro Jung is Research Professor of Early Modern British Literature and Director of the Centre for the Study of Text and Print Culture at Ghent University.

Contributors: Gerard Carruthers, Nathalie Collé-Bak, Marysa Demoor, Alan Downie, Peter Garside, Sandro Jung, Brian Maidment, Laura L. Runge.
Introduction - Sandro Jung
Tracing a Genealogy of Oroonoko Editions, 1688-2002 - Laura Runge
The Pilgrim's Progress, Print Culture and the Dissenting Tradition - Nathalie Colle-Bak
Printing for the Author in the Long Eighteenth Century - Alan Downie
Robert Burns's Interleaved Scots Musical Museum: A Case-Study in the Vagaries of Editors and Owners - Gerard Carruthers
Packaging, Design and Colour: From Fine-Printed to Small-Format Editions of Thomson's The Seasons, 1793-1802 - Sandro Jung
Print Illustrations and the Cultural Materialism of Scott's Waverley Novels - Peter Garside
Beyond Usefulness and Ephemerality: The Discursive Almanac, 1828-60 - Brian Maidment
The Last Years of a Victorian Monument: The Athenaeum after Maccoll - Marysa Demoor
"An elegant, intense and ambitious snapshot of current research in the history of printing." RARE BOOKS NEWSLETTER
"Shows how the established methodologies of the history of the book can combine fruitfully with tools derived from textual and illustration studies." JOURNAL OF THE EDINBURGH BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY

Hardcover

9781843843436

October 2013

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9781782041993

October 2013

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Title Details

239 Pages

2.16 x 1.38 cm

4 colour, 40 b/w illus.

Series: Essays and Studies

Series Vol. Number: 66

Imprint: D.S.Brewer