Marketing English Books, 1476-1550: How Printers Changed Reading

Author:   Alexandra da Costa (Senior Lecturer, Faculty of English, University of Cambridge)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198847588


Pages:   290
Publication Date:   04 November 2020
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Our Price $225.00 Quantity:  
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Marketing English Books, 1476-1550: How Printers Changed Reading


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Full Product Details

Author:   Alexandra da Costa (Senior Lecturer, Faculty of English, University of Cambridge)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.50cm , Height: 24.00cm , Length: 2.20cm
Weight:   0.592kg
ISBN:  

9780198847588


ISBN 10:   0198847580
Pages:   290
Publication Date:   04 November 2020
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Introduction Devotional Reading 1: Sweet consolation: catechetical and contemplative guides 2: Dangerous fruit: selling forbidden books Worldly Reading 3: A taste for trifles: romances, scurrilous tales and merry gests 4: A hunger for news: pamphlets and broadsheets Practical Reading 5: Wide-ranging appetites: pilgrimage guides, advertisements and souvenirs 6: For the reader's digest: books for the householder, husband and housewife Afterword

Reviews

Throughout every chapter, da Costa brings a wide range of examples from the genre under examination, which gives a richly detailed picture of the English print market during its first seventy-five years. Her meticulous research focuses scholarly attention on the often-overlooked contributions of early printers, particularly those beyond the frequently studied pair of Caxton and de Worde, and shows the potential abundance of insights that can be drawn from close analysis of the material aspects of printed texts. * Rhonda Sharrah, Comitatus *


Da Costa's erudite, impeccably documented, and wide-ranging study convincingly argues for the active agency of printers in creating a reading market for their books in order to survive in the largely untested business of bookselling. With impressive scholarship she has skilfully negotiated the difficulties presented by the patchiness of extant material evidence within the highly complex religious and social environment of the early sixteenth century. * Hilary Maddocks, Script & Print * da Costa reminds literary scholars of the importance of looking beyond the text, not just to the paratext but also to the economic motives of those who had a hand in producing the text. And for book historians, da Costa's study demonstrates the benefits of looking beyond a single printer, author or genre to see broader trends arise from books that may not have otherwise been studied together. * Mimi Ensley, Journal of British Studies * Marketing English Books is a valuable resource for readers who wish to understand the book trade as a whole as well as those interested in contextualizing a specific text or genre. It often challenges traditional assumptions about how texts were marketed and offers convincing evidence to support its challenges. * David Eugene Clark, Reformation * ^lMarketing English Books, 1476-1550 succeeds in demonstrating how individual printers could build on previous marketing strategies but also prove themselves innovators by putting those strategies to new uses. * Brenda M. Hosington, Universit´e de Montr´eal/University of Warwick, Renaissance and Reformation * Alexandra da Costa's account of the marketing of early English printed books certainly lives up to the scholarly standards demonstrated in previous Oxford Studies works and responds admirably to the general editors' criterion of interdisciplinary and innovative research. * Brenda M. Hosington, Renaissance and Reformation * accessible and detailed ... useful to a variety of readers, regardless of prior experience. * David Eugene Clark, Reformation * this is a readable account of the early history of printing in England that succeeds in revealing the strategies that printers deployed in the presentation of individual works * Margaret Connolly, Journal of Early Book Society * Throughout every chapter, da Costa brings a wide range of examples from the genre under examination, which gives a richly detailed picture of the English print market during its first seventy-five years. Her meticulous research focuses scholarly attention on the often-overlooked contributions of early printers, particularly those beyond the frequently studied pair of Caxton and de Worde, and shows the potential abundance of insights that can be drawn from close analysis of the material aspects of printed texts. * Rhonda Sharrah, Comitatus *


Author Information

Alexandra da Costa is a Senior University Lecturer at the Faculty of English in Cambridge. Her research primarily focuses on early printed books meant for an English readership and late fifteenth- and early sixteenth-century religious culture. Her previous book, Reforming Printing: Syon Abbey's Defence of Orthodoxy 1524-1535 (OUP, 2012) examined the printed books that Syon Abbey sponsored in the turbulent 1530s, when the Church in England was threatened by both the spread of Lutheran heresy and Henry VIII's desire for greater ecclesiastical control.

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