Forms, Formats and the Circulation of Knowledge explores the printscape â the mental mapping of knowledge in all its printed shapes â to chart the British networks of publishers, printers, copyright-holders, readers and authors. This transdisciplinary volume skilfully recovers innovations and practices in the book trade between 1688 and 1832. It investigates how print circulated information in a multitude of sizes and media, through an evolving framework of transactions. The authority of print is demonstrated by studies of prospectuses, blank forms, periodicals, pamphlets, globes, games and ephemera, uniquely gathered in eleven essays engaging in legal, economic, literary, and historical methodologies. The tight focus on material format reappraises a disorderly market accommodating a widening audience consumption.
2 Jobbing Printing in Late Early Modern London: Questions of Variety, Stability and Regularity
âJames Raven
3 John Dunton, Bookseller and Author: Market Competition and Restrictive Practices from the Age of Licensing to the Advent of Copyright
âJeffrey Hopes
4 Entering into Copyright: AuthorâPublisher Transactions in the Stationersâ Company Records
âRebecca Schoff Curtin
5 Copyright and the Circulation of Geographical Knowledge in Eighteenth-Century Britain
âIsabella Alexander
6 The Vauxhall Affray: Celebrity and Self-Promotion through the Manipulation of Print
âYvonne Cornish
Part 2: (Per) forming Knowledge in Print
7 At the Ends of the Earth and on the Fringes of Print: Globe Production and Use in Britain, 1650â1800
âKatherine Parker
8 Trading in Trauma: Accidents, Knowledge and Early English Newspapers
âCraig Spence
9 Compositorsâ Choices in Eighteenth-Century Typography
âJames P. Ascher
10 Format and Meaning-Making in Religious Turn-up Books
âJacqueline Reid-Walsh
11 The Book to Come: Literary Advertising and the Poetics of the Prospectus
âDavid Duff
âBibliography of Secondary Sources
âIndex of Names
âIndex of terms
Researchers in book history, in its widest definitions; scholars of the history of copyrights, and readers interested in the material circulation of knowledge, from popular culture to scholarly subjects.