[go: up one dir, main page]

Peiser, 2017 - Google Patents

Reviews as database: reading the review periodical in eighteenth-century England

Peiser, 2017

Document ID
8754972917740885360
Author
Peiser M
Publication year
Publication venue
The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America

External Links

Snippet

H ow did eighteenth-century readers read the Review periodical? 1 Despite its long run across the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, influence on book production and reception, and impact on reading practices, no work has yet set out to uncover how review periodicals …
Continue reading at www.journals.uchicago.edu (other versions)

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09DRAILWAY OR LIKE TIME OR FARE TABLES; PERPETUAL CALENDARS
    • G09D3/00Perpetual calendars
    • G09D3/04Perpetual calendars wherein members bearing the indicia are movably mounted in the calendar
    • G09D3/06Perpetual calendars wherein members bearing the indicia are movably mounted in the calendar with rotatable members

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
Simon et al. A Companion to the History of the Book
Mussell The Nineteenth-Century Press in the Digital Age
Blair Too much to know: Managing scholarly information before the modern age
Rosenzweig The road to Xanadu: Public and private pathways on the history web
Baldwin Art and Commerce in the British Short Story, 1880–1950
Montoya Enlightenment? What Enlightenment? Reflections on Half a Million Books (British, French, and Dutch Private Libraries, 1665–1830)
Levy et al. How and why to Do Things with Eighteenth-century Manuscripts
Bates Historical research using British newspapers
Pantaleo An investigation of the functionality of peritextual elements in graphic novels
Peiser Reviews as database: reading the review periodical in eighteenth-century England
Šauperl Pinning down a novel: characteristics of literary works as perceived by readers
Pearsall New Directions in Later Medieval Manuscript Studies: Essays from the 1998 Harvard Conference
Stephens Vanguard total index: Conceptual writing, information asymmetry, and the risk society
Collini ‘The Chatto List’: Publishing Literary Criticism in Mid-Twentieth-Century Britain
Pinto Key document: Eight books, seven poets, one Clearing House
Warner Collating Piers Plowman in Archbishop Parker’s Household
Nicholson et al. Building The Old Joke Archive
Bourne Shakespeare and ‘textual studies’: Evidence, scale, periodization and access
Hill Owners and collectors of the printed books of the early modern Lord Mayors’ shows
Brake Revolutions in Journalism: WT Stead, Indexing, and ‘Searching’
Krapp Paper slips: the long reign of the index card and card catalog
Keeran et al. Literary research and the British eighteenth century: strategies and sources
Epp How to Read a Drawer: Print Culture and Humour Practice in Harper’s New Monthly Magazine
Wang ‘The Cornerstone of Scholarship’: Library Catalogues in Late Imperial China
Mangum Fitzgerald and the Literary Marketplace: Writing for Love and Money