This Element examines the trade in rare books and manuscripts between Britain and America during a period known as the “Golden Age” of collecting. Through analysis of contemporary press reports, personal correspondence, trade publications and sales records, this study contrasts American and British perspectives as rare books passed through the commercial market. The aim is to compare the rhetoric and reality of the book trade in order to assess its impact on emerging cultural institutions, contemporary scholarship and shifting notions of national identity. By analysing how markets emerged, dealers functioned and buyers navigated the market, this Element interrogates accepted narratives about the ways in which major rare book and manuscript ...
This thesis describes the changes in the English book trade in the late 18th century. The life of th...
In the twentieth century, cumulative millions of readers received books by mail from clubs like Book...
Times have changed. In the mid 1980s, when I wrote my biography of John Almon, a study of the reflex...
This thesis examines the changing values assigned to books and shows why some items are now consider...
The books and papers offered in this submission are concerned with the history of books and the book...
Rare book cataloging codes and practices have been shaped by a constant interplay between the tradit...
A study of the history of the book trade (printing, bookselling, stationery and publishing) in Leice...
Circulating library catalogs offer one of the most revealing views available of book publishing and ...
MCKITTERICK David, The Invention of Rare Books : Private Interest and Public Memory, 1600–1840 (New ...
This thesis follows the British publisher Macmillan & Co. as it set up its first international bran...
Printed advertisements and lists of books for sales were used by publishers and booksellers in the f...
This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Oxford University Press via https:/...
This is a history of Eighteenth-Century Collections Online, a database of over 180,000 titles. Publi...
While it is impossible to trace the specific journey of the 1507 Kerver Book of Hours, it is consist...
Joseph Whitaker is best remembered today as the originator of Whitaker’s Almanack but he should also...
This thesis describes the changes in the English book trade in the late 18th century. The life of th...
In the twentieth century, cumulative millions of readers received books by mail from clubs like Book...
Times have changed. In the mid 1980s, when I wrote my biography of John Almon, a study of the reflex...
This thesis examines the changing values assigned to books and shows why some items are now consider...
The books and papers offered in this submission are concerned with the history of books and the book...
Rare book cataloging codes and practices have been shaped by a constant interplay between the tradit...
A study of the history of the book trade (printing, bookselling, stationery and publishing) in Leice...
Circulating library catalogs offer one of the most revealing views available of book publishing and ...
MCKITTERICK David, The Invention of Rare Books : Private Interest and Public Memory, 1600–1840 (New ...
This thesis follows the British publisher Macmillan & Co. as it set up its first international bran...
Printed advertisements and lists of books for sales were used by publishers and booksellers in the f...
This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Oxford University Press via https:/...
This is a history of Eighteenth-Century Collections Online, a database of over 180,000 titles. Publi...
While it is impossible to trace the specific journey of the 1507 Kerver Book of Hours, it is consist...
Joseph Whitaker is best remembered today as the originator of Whitaker’s Almanack but he should also...
This thesis describes the changes in the English book trade in the late 18th century. The life of th...
In the twentieth century, cumulative millions of readers received books by mail from clubs like Book...
Times have changed. In the mid 1980s, when I wrote my biography of John Almon, a study of the reflex...