Print and Society in Early Modern England. Course Guide

1 Print and Society in Early Modern England Course Guide Outline The invention of printing in the late fifteenth century brought about a media revolu...
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Print and Society in Early Modern England Course Guide Outline The invention of printing in the late fifteenth century brought about a media revolution, comparable to the rise of the codex in the fourth century and the internet in the twentieth. Print profoundly affected every aspect of early modern English politics, religion, culture, and society. This Specified Subject explores both the medium of print and its impact in the period c.1500-c.1750. You will be introduced to the burgeoning discipline of the ‘history of the book’, by studying the technology and economics of the book trade; the growth in output; the physical make-up of books as material artefacts; the nature of bookselling and bookshops and their connection with literacy and reading practices; the relationship between print, manuscript, and orality; the emergence of new genres (newspapers, pamphlets, cartoons); the nature of authorship; and attempts by the trade, government, and churches to regulate, control, or punish authors, printers, and booksellers. The paper will also examine the impact of print on political, religious, and intellectual culture. Print facilitated new forms of polemical debate and arguably gave rise to the formation of public opinion. It also played a significant role in the construction of religious, political, provincial, and national identities and enabled the communication of new knowledge across continents. The increasing quantity of cheap print, in the form chapbooks, ballads, novellas, news, and almanacs, sold to ordinary readers, has given rise to questions about the reception and meaning of new ideas and knowledge at all levels of society. We will, finally, consider the impact print has had on our own scholarly interpretation of the period, and the methodological issues it raises for historians. The paper includes local fieldtrips: the University Library’s hidden printing museum, where you will learn to print using a hand press; another in the UL Rare Books Room to analyse a seventeenth-century collection of printed ephemera; and visits to two libraries, Samuel Pepys’s at Magdalene and the Trinity Hall Old Library. Teaching will be provided through an integrated combination of lectures, discussion classes, and supervisions. The paper will be of especial interest to those contemplating careers in the media, publishing, authorship, and of course academic research. Start date

October 2015

Teachers

Professor Mark Goldie (mag1010), Dr Kate Peters (mkp30)

Examination • Three-hour unseen; answer 3 questions; undivided paper • There will always be a question set on each of the lecture topics Faculty norms for Specified papers • Teaching hours: 28-34 hours, to include 4-7 supervisions • Reading list: 100-150 items • Exam paper: 18-22 questions (with one or two either/ors)

Teaching regime for this paper • Michaelmas: 8 lectures; plus 4 x 90-min classes; plus 2 fieldtrips • Lent: the same • Supervisions, 4 per student; in either term • Total contact hours: 32, excluding fieldtrips (38 including) • The classes are hands-on practical exercises • Supervision topics are the same as the lecture topics • Fieldtrips: o University Library: Historical Printing workshop: 2 hours o University Library: Rare Books Room: the Verney Collection: 2 hours o Magdalene College: Pepys Library: 1 hour o Trinity Hall: Old Library: 1 hour Lectures Michaelmas Term 1 MG/KP } Introductions: approaches to print 2 KP/MG } 3 MG Analysing output: genres, formats, paratext, editions, printruns 4 KP Literacy and reading 5 MG Publishing, bookselling, and the marketplace 6 KP Pamphlets, pamphleteering, polemic, and the ‘public sphere’ 7 MG Authorship, patronage, anonymity, and intellectual property 8 KP The invention of the newspaper Lent Term 9 KP 10 MG 11 KP 12 MG 13 KP 14 15 16

MG KP MG

Official printing and government information Censorship and regulation of the press Print and the nation, and print beyond the nation Libraries and book collecting The literature of religious identity: popular piety, nonconformity, and Catholicism Non-textual print: woodcuts and cartoons Moral panic and the literature of demonization The limits of print?: scribal communities; orality and the aural

Classes [content under construction] Michaelmas Term 3 The London press and the growth of the printing industry: investigating the English Short Title Catalogue (ESTC) 4 Audience, readership, literacy, and reading: investigating title pages, ballads, and popular literature 6 The public sphere and political polemic: investigating the Verney Collection and Poems on Affairs of State 8 News and the invention of the newspaper: investigating early newsbooks

3 Lent Term 10 Censorship and the regulation of the press: investigating John Milton and 17th century government controls 12 Libraries and collecting: investigating catalogues and an unpublished inventory of books 14 Non-textual print: investigating woodcuts in EEBO, the Pepys Collection, and cartoons 16 Moral panic and the limitations of print: investigating EEBO sources Supervision essays You may select any four of the 14 (non-Introductory) topics on the Reading List. While there is no formal restriction on choice, it is important that you address both print production (e.g. bookselling, authorship, censorship) and the impacts of print (e.g. on politics and religion). As with other Tripos papers, essays should be at least 2500 words. Since you will have four supervisions, the regime will be a fortnight per essay. Some points of guidance • Write up notes from classes and fieldtrips as well as from reading and lectures • Browse the open shelves of the UL’s Rare Books Room • Although the paper is formally confined to English publishing, be aware of some of the literature on European, and pan-British, publishing: we will examine interactions with the Scottish, Irish, North American, and Continental presses • Our chronological period is c.1500 to c.1750 • Literature on women and print culture has been integrated throughout Key online resources • ESTC – English Short Title Catalogue (all books before 1800) • EEBO – Early English Books Online (texts of most books before 1700) • ECCO – Eighteenth-Century Collections Online (texts of many books 17001800) • ODNB – Oxford Dictionary of National Biography • BBTI – British Book Trade Index Suggested places to visit in addition to our fieldtrips • Libraries o Wren Library, Trinity College, Cambridge o Parker Library, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge o The Plume Library, Maldon, Essex, CM9 4PZ o The British Library, King’s Cross, London •

Printing o Printing Section, Cambridge Museum of Technology, CB5 8LD o St Bride’s Printing Library, London, EC4Y 8EQ (pre-booked tours) o Printing Section, Milton Keynes Museum, MK12 5EL o Printing Section, Bradford Industrial Museum, BD2 3HP o Robert Smail’s Printing Works, Innerleithen, Scotland, EH44 6HA

Print and Society in Early Modern England Sample Exam Paper Answer three questions 1.

‘Historians of print culture tend to ignore the economics of the trade.’ Discuss.

2.

Explain the recent scholarly shift from authorial intention to reader reception.

3.

What are the hazards of offering statistics for the output of the press?

4.

What methods can historians use to understand early modern reading

practices? 5.

What roles did women have in the early modern book trades?

6.

‘In the century after 1650 bookshops mattered more than coffee-houses in the

formation of “public opinion”.’ Discuss. 7.

Was there a concept of intellectual property in early modern England?

8.

In the seventeenth century, what was a newspaper?

9.

When and how did governments begin to take an interest in the press?

10.

‘The effectiveness of press censorship has been grossly exaggerated.’

Discuss. 11.

Either (a) In what ways does London’s printed output provide only a partial guide to the printed material that was available to the peoples of the British Isles? Or (b) When can we begin to speak of ‘the colonial book’?

12.

Besides reading them, what functions did books serve?

13.

How were religious minorities able to use print to ‘punch above their weight’?

14.

Analyse any two of the woodcuts reproduced overleaf. [+ IMAGES]

15.

In what ways did print shape hostility to either Catholicism or Puritanism?

16.

Why did manuscript publication survive in the age of print?

17.

When and why did the collecting of printed ephemera begin?

18.

‘No two copies of an early modern printed book are the same.’ Is this an

exaggeration? END

5

Print and Society in Early Modern England Reading List • • • • • • •

The Reading List follows the schedule of lectures and supervision topics However, many books cover several topics, so you need to read around, and need to make constant use of items in the opening section, ‘Introductions’ You should do some reading on every topic, not just those you select for supervision essays At the end, there are additional sections listing reference works and examples of early modern library catalogues UL classmarks are provided: B=Rare Books Room; RR=Reading Room; WR=West Room; NF1=North Front, Floor 1, etc. It is well worth browsing the open shelves in the UL Rare Books Room: all shelfmarks below beginning with ‘B’ are to be found there Likewise, browse the best journal in the field, The Library (B990)

Essential online resources: ESTC – English Short Title Catalogue (all books before 1800) EEBO – Early English Books Online (texts of most books before 1700) ECCO – Eighteenth-Century Collections Online (texts of many books 1700-1800) ODNB – Oxford Dictionary of National Biography BBTI – British Book Trade Index Essential books: The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain A660.65 (MSS Room); B260.18-20; 9006.c.3778-80 (RR) Vol. 3, 1400-1557, eds. L. Hellinger & J. B. Trapp (1999) Vol. 4, 1557-1695, eds. J. Barnard & D. F. McKenzie (2002) Vol. 5, 1695-1830, eds., M. F. Suarez & M. L. Turner (2009) Abbreviation: CHBB: The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain [plus volume number]

1

& 2. Introductions: approaches to print

Although our paper is about the English press, this section includes general material on early modern printing and textuality throughout Europe Balsamo, L., Bibliography: History of a Tradition (1990), chs. 4-6. 9851.b.200.10 (Commonwealth Room) Barnard, J., & D. F. McKenzie, eds., The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, Vol. 4, 1557-1695 (2002). B260.18 Blair, A., Too Much to Know: Managing Scholarly Information before the Modern Age (2010) 860.c.221 (WR) Bland, M., A Guide to Early Printed Books and Manuscripts (2010). B203.16; 2013.9.3570 (WR). Briggs, A., & Burke, P., A Social History of the Media from Gutenburg to the Internet, 2e (2005), chs 2-3. 200.3.b.43 Chartier, R., The Order of Books: Readers, Authors, and Libraries in Europe between the Fourteenth and Eighteenth Centuries (1994) Darnton, R., The Case for Books (2009), esp. ‘What is the History of Books?’ UL: ebook Eisenstein, E., The Printing Press as an Agent of Change, 2 vols. (1979). B220.7-8. One-vol. abridgement: The Printing Revolution in Early Modern Europe (1983; 2e 2005). 860.b.160 (WR); 9003.c.4062 (RR). Also her ‘Some Conjectures about the Impact of Printing on Western Society and Thought’, Journal of Modern History, 40 (1968) Eliot, S., & Rose, J., A Companion to the History of the Book (2007) 850.b.277 (WR) Febvre, L., & H.-J. Martin, The Coming of the Book, 1450-1800 (1976 [1958]) B220.5; 9850.c.1874 (RR) Finckelstein, D., & McCleery, A., An Introduction to Book History, 2e (2013), chs. 1, 3, 4, 6 C207.c.2239 (RR) Finckelstein, D., & McCleery, A., eds., The Book History Reader (2002, 2006). 850.b.281 (WR) Fraistat, N., & Flanders, J., The Cambridge Companion to Textual Scholarship (2013). 700.1.c.201.155 (NW1) Gadd, I., ed., The History of the Book in the West (2010) 850.c.822.26 (WR) Gaskell, P., A New Introduction to Bibliography (1972; 2007) C203.c.6109 (RR); 9005.c.8609 (RR) Grafton, A., ‘The Importance of Being Printed’, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 11 (1980)

Hellinger, L., & Trapp, J. B., eds., The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, Vol. 3, 1400-1557 (1999) Johns, A., The Nature of the Book: Print and Knowledge in the Making (1998) 433.c.99.204 (NF1) King, J. N., ed., Tudor Books and Readers (2010) 730.2.c.201.1 (NW3) McGann, J. J., A Critique of Modern Textual Criticism (1983) 700.1.d.95.262 (NW1 corridor) McGann, J. J., The Textual Condition (1991), chs 1-5. 700.1.c.95.1080 (NW1) McKenzie, D. F., Making Meaning: Printers of the Mind and Other Essays (2002) 864.c.137 (WR) Pearson, D., Books as History: the Importance of Books Beyond their Texts (2008). C200.b.7220 (RR); 2012.10.1931 (WR) Pettegree, A., & M. Hall, ‘The Reformation and the Book: A Reconsideration’, Historical Journal, 47 (2004) Pettegree, A., The Book in the Renaissance (2010) 850.c.820 (WR); 2031.8.5055 (WR) Suarez, M. F., & M. L. Turner, eds., The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, Vol. 5, 1695-1830 (2009). B260.19 Suarez, M. F., ‘Historiographical Problems and Possibilities in Books History and National Histories of Books’, Studies in Bibliography, 56 (2003-4) Suarez, M. F. & H. R. Woodhuysen, eds., The Book: A Global History (2013), chs. 11-16, 20, 22a. 700.1.c.201.179 (NW1). [Comprises part of the Oxford Companion to the Book (2010). B271.33] Tanselle, T., Literature and Artifact (1998). 9851.c.253.123 (RR)

3. Analysing output: genres, formats, paratext, editions, printruns Bennett, H. S., English Books and Readers, 1475-1640, 3 vols., (1952-70) B851.2-4 Bernard, J., ‘The Survival and Loss Rates of Psalms, ABCS, Psalters, and Primers from the Stationers’ Stock, 1660-1700’, The Library, 21 (1995) Genette, G., Paratexts (1997) C205.c.9838 (RR) 864.c.137 (WR) Kesson, A., & Smith, E., eds., The Elizabethan Top Ten: Defining Print Popularity in Elizabethan England (2013) 730.2.c.201.34 (NF3) McKenzie, D. F., ‘The London Book Trade in 1668’, in his Making Meaning (2002) Tanselle, G. T., Bibliographical Analysis: A Historical Introduction (2009). B200.8 Genres: Capp, B., Astrology and the Popular Press: English Almanacs, 1500-1800 (1979). B160.4 Raymond, J., ed., The Oxford History of Popular Print Culture, vol. 1, Cheap Print in Britain and Ireland to 1660 (2011) 727.13.b.201.1 (NW3) Spufford, M., Small Books and Pleasant Histories: Popular Fiction and its Readership in Seventeenth-Century England (1981) 240.c.98.230 (SW6); Uc.2.7923 (WR) Watt, T., Cheap Print and Popular Piety, 1550-1640 (1991). 542.22.c.95.41 (NF4) 4. Literacy and reading Altick, R. D., The English Common Reader (1967), chs 1-3. 730.c.95.349 (NW3) Anderson, J., & Sauer, E., Books and Readers in Early Modern England (2002) 850.c.595 (WR) Baron, S., The Reader Revealed (2001) 2003.10.209 (RR) Cambers, A., Godly Reading: Print, Manuscript, and Puritanism in England, 1580-1720 (2011) 474.6.c.201.5 (NF3) Corns, T., ‘The Early Modern Search Engine’, in N. Rhodes & J. Sawday, eds., The Renaissance Computer: Knowledge Technology in the First Age of Print (2000) 200.3.b.200.21 (SW5) Craik, K. A., Reading Sensations in Early Modern England (2007) 730.4.c.200.535 (NW3) Cressy, D., ‘Books as Totems in Seventeenth-Century England and New England’, Journal of Library History, 21 (1986) Jackson, H. J., Marginalia: Readers Writing in Books (2001) 850.c.585 (WR) Jagodzinski, C. M., Privacy and Print: Reading and Writing in Seventeenth-Century England (1999), chs 1-3. 730.4.c.95.719 (NW3) Jardine, L., & Grafton, A. ‘Studied for Action: how Gabriel Harvey read his Livy’, Past & Present, 129 (1990) Raven, J., H. Small, & N. Tadmor, eds., The Practice and Representation of Reading in England (1996) 700.1.c.95.1403 (NW1); 9006.c.3695 (RR) Rivers, I., ed., Books and Readers in Eighteenth-Century England (1982) 850.c.396 (WR) Rivers, I., ed., Books and Readers in Eighteenth-Century England: New Essays (2001) 544.14.c.200.8 (NF4) St Clair, W., The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period (2004) 730.c.200.29 (NW3) Sharpe, K., Reading Revolutions: The Politics of Reading in Early Modern England (2000) 543.1.c.200.2 (NF4)

7 Sharpe, K., & Zwicker, S., eds., Reading, Society, and Politics in Early Modern England (2003) 542.1.c.200.4 (NF4) Sherman, W. H., John Dee: The Politics of Reading and Writing in the English Renaissance (1995) 198.c.99.84 (SW5) Sherman, W. H., Used Books: Marking Readers in Renaissance England (2008) 740.4.c.200.1022 (NW3) Wheale, N., Writing and Society: Literacy, Print, and Politics in Britain, 1590-1660 (1999). 850.b.248 (WR) Literacy: Cressy, D., Literacy and the Social Order (1980) 240.c.98.10 (SW6) Fox, A., Oral and Literate Culture in England, 1500-1700 (2000) 474.6.c.200.4 (NF3); 2004.8.9070 (WR) Schofield, R. S., ‘The Measurement of Literacy in Pre-Industrial England’, in J. R. Goody, ed., Literacy in Traditional Societies (1968) 240.c.96.810 (SW6); 9240.c.781 (RR) Spufford, M., ‘First Steps in Literacy: the Reading and Writing Experiences of the Humblest Seventeenthcentury Spiritual Autobiographers’ Social History, 4 (1979) 5. Publishing, bookselling, and the marketplace Bell, M., ‘Women in the English Book Trades, 1557-1700’, Leipziger Jahrbuch sur Bochgeschichte, 6 (1996) Blagden, C., The Stationers’ Company: a History (1960) B801.4 Blayney, P. W. M., The Stationers’ Company and the Printers of London, 1501-1557, 2 vols. (2013) 238.c.201.14-15 (SW6) Bracken, J. K., & J. Silver, eds., The British Literary Book Trade, 1475-1700 (1996) R718.60 (RR): sample the many case studies in this volume Feather, J., The Provincial Book Trade in Eighteenth-Century England (1985) B801.19 Feather, J., A History of British Publishing, 2e (2005). B801.29 Ferdinand, C., ‘Constructing the Frameworks of Desire: How Newspapers Sold Books in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries’, Prose Studies, 21 (1998) Gadd, I., ed., The History of Oxford University Press, vol. 1, to 1780 (2013). 864.b.239-41 (WR) Handover, P. M., Printing in London (1960). B260.3 Lindenbaum, P., 'Authors and Publishers in the Late Seventeenth-Century: Brabazon Aylmer and the Mysteries of the Trade', The Library, 3 (2002) McKitterick, D., A History of Cambridge University Press, 3 vols (1992-2004), vols. 1-2. B260.5.6-7 McKenzie, D. F., The Cambridge University Press, 1696-1712, 2 vols. (1966). B260.5.2-3 Plant, M., The English Book Trade, 3e (1974). B260.6 Raven, J., The Business of Books: Booksellers and the English Book Trade, 1450-1850 (2007) 864.c.147 (WR) Raven, J., Bookscape: Geographies of Printing and Publishing in London before 1800 (2014) 433.b.201.13 (NF1) Raven, J., Publishing Business in Eighteenth-Century England (2014) 227.2.c.201.338 (SW6) Smith, H., Women and Book Production in Early Modern England (2012) 730.4.c.201.412 (NW3) Steinberg, S. H., Five Hundred Years of Printing (1959), pts 1-2. B212.8 Treadwell, M., ‘London Trade Publishers, 1675-1750’, The Library, 4 (1982) Primary source: John Dunton, The Life and Errors of John Dunton (1705) – on ECCO

6. Pamphlets, pamphleteering, polemic, and the ‘public sphere’ Bayman, A., Thomas Dekker and the Culture of Pamphleteering in Early Modern London (2014) 727.23.c.201.19 (NF3) Calhoun, C., ed., Habermas and the Public Sphere (1992), Intro., and Ch. by Zaret 200.c.99.286 (SW5); 200.c.99.1965 (SW5) Como, D. ‘Print, Censorship and Ideological Escalation in the English Civil War’, Journal of British Studies, 51 (2012) Freist, D., Governed by Opinion: Politics, Religion, and the Dynamics of Communication in Stuart London, 1637-1645 (1997) 543.3.c.95.29 (NF4) Fumerton, P., & Guerrini, A., eds., Ballads and Broadsides in England, 1500-1800 (2010) 721.13.c.201.3 (NW2) Goldie, M., ‘The Revolution of 1689 and the Structure of Political Argument’, Bulletin of Research in the Humanities, 83 (1980)

Halasz, A., The Marketplace of Print: Pamphlets and the Public Sphere in Early Modern England (1997) 727.13.c.95.36 (NW3) King, J. N., ed., Tudor Books and Readers (2010). Chs. by Clegg & Walsham 730.2.c.201.1 (NW3) Lake, P., & Pincus, S., ‘Rethinking the Public Sphere in Early Modern England’, Journal of British Studies, 45 (2006) 540.1.c.200.22 (NF4) Lake, P., & Pincus, S., ed., The Politics of the Public Sphere in Early Modern England (2006) Knights, M., Representation and Misrepresentation in Later Stuart Britain: Partisanship and Political Culture (2004) 543.5.c.200.3 (NF4) Knight, M., ‘London Petitions and Parliamentary Politics in 1679’, Parliamentary History, 12 (1993) Knights, M., ‘London’s “Monster” Petition of 1680’, Historical Journal, 36 (1993) Knights, M., Politics and Opinion in Crisis, 1678-1681 (1994) 543.6.c.95.31 (NF4) Nevitt, M., Women and the Pamphlet Culture of Revolutionary England, 1640-1660 (2006) 245.2.c.200.1123 (SF2) Peacey, J., Politicians and Pamphleteers: Propaganda during the English Civil Wars and Interregnum (2004) 543.4.c.200.10 (NF4) Peacey, J., Print and Public Politics in the English Revolution (2013) 543.1.c.201.15 (NF4) Peacey, J., ‘The Hunting of the Leveller: The Sophistication of Parliamentarian Propaganda, 1647-1653’, Historical Research, 78 (2005) Raymond, J., Pamphlets and Pamphleteering in Early Modern Britain (2003) 727.17.c.200.8 (NW3) Zaret, D., Origins of Democratic Culture: Printing, Petitions, and the Public Sphere in Early-Modern England (2000) 557.4.c.200.1 (NF4) Case study: coffee houses: Berry, H., ‘An Early Coffee House Periodical and its Readers: the Athenian Mercury, 1691-1697’, London Journal, 25 (2000) Berry, H., ‘”Nice and Curious Questions”: Coffee Houses and the Representation of Women in John Dunton’s Athenian Mercury’, Seventeenth Century, 12 (1997) Cowan, B., The Social Life of Coffee: the Emergence of the British Coffeehouse (2005) 474.6.c.200.14 (NF3); 2011.9.2082 (WR) Cowan, B., ‘What was Masculine about the Public Sphere?: Gender and the Coffee House Milieu in PostRestoration England’, History Workshop Journal 51 (2001) Pincus, S., ‘“Coffee Politicians Does Create”: Coffeehouses and Restoration Political Culture’, Journal of Modern History, 67 (1995) 7. Authorship, patronage, anonymity, and intellectual property Dobranski, S. B., Milton, Authorship, and the Book Trade (1999) 721.23.c.95.311 (NW1) Ezell, M., Social Authorship and the Advent of Print (1999) 730.4.c.95.782 (NW3) Feather, J., ‘The Publishers and the Pirates: British Copyright Law in Theory and Practice, 1710-1775’, Publishing History, 22 (1987) Feather, J., Publishing, Piracy, and Politics (1994) B801.28; 360.c.95.488 (SF2) Griffin, D., Literary Patronage in England, 1650-1800 (1996) 730.2.c.98.244 (NW3) Griffin, R. J., ed., The Faces of Anonymity (2003) 730.4.c.200.472 (NW3) Ingrassia, C., Authorship, Commerce, and Gender in Early Eighteenth-Century England (1998) 725.25.c.95.199 (NW3) Jagodzinski, C. M., Privacy and Print: Reading and Writing in Seventeenth-Century England (1999), chs 4-5. 730.4.c.95.719 (NW3) Johns, A., Piracy: Intellectual Property Wars from Gutenburg to Gates (2009). 236.c.200.1392 (SW6) Kewes, P., Authorship and Appropriation: Writing for the Stage in England, 1660-1710 (1998) 759.c.87.45 (NW6) Loewenstein, J., The Author’s Due: Printing and the Prehistory of Copyright (2002) Squire Law Library J.d.9.L.22 McDowell, P., The Women of Grub Street: Press, Politics, and Gender in the London Marketplace, 1678-1730 (1999) 730.4.c.95.598 (NW3); 1998.8.8567 (WR) Maclean, I., Scholarship, Commerce, Religion: the Learned Book in the Age of Confessions, 1560-1730 (2012) 433.c.201.31 (NF1) Maslen, K., ‘Printing for the Author: from the Bowyer Printing Ledgers, 1710-1775’, The Library, 27 (1972) Mullen, J., Anonymity: a Secret History of English Literature (2007) 730.4.c.200.628 (NW3) Pask, K., The Emergence of the English Author (1996) 721.15.c.95.6 (NW1) Rogers, P., Grub Street: Studies in a Subculture (1972) 730.c.97.518 (NW3) Rose, M., Authors and Owners: the Invention of Copyright (1993) 260.c.95.468 (SF2)

9 Saunders, D., Authorship and Copyright (1992) 700.4.c.95.45 (NW1) Saunders, J. W., ‘The Stigma of Print’, Essays in Criticism (1951) Sample some bibliographies of individual authors (all at B151): Francis Bacon, George Berkeley, Robert Boyle, Sir Thomas Browne, Daniel Defoe (both the Moore and the Furbank/Owens bibliographies), John Donne, John Dryden, Eliza Hayward, Thomas Hobbes, Robert Hooke, John Locke (the Christopherson or the Yolton bibliographies), Sir Thomas More, William Penn Early author-publisher contracts: Milton’s and Locke’s contracts – texts to be supplied. 8. The invention of the newspaper This topic includes all periodical literature, such as literary journals, and part-works. It also includes a couple of items on the communication of news and gossip more generally. Berry, H., Gender, Society, and Print Culture in Late-Stuart England: the Cultural World of the Athenian Mercury (2003) 705.4.c.200.17 (NW1 corridor) Bond, D. H., & McLeod, W. R., Newsletters to Newspapers: Eighteenth-Century Journalism (1977) 9700.c.828 (RR) Cust, R., ‘News and Politics in Early Seventeenth-Century England’, Past & Present, 112 (1986) Fox, A., Oral and Literate Culture (2000), Ch. 7; 474.6.c.200.4 (NF3); 2004.8.9070 (WR) Harris, M., London Newspapers in the Age of Walpole (1987) 705.4.c.95.114 (NW1 corridor) Harris, R., Politics and the Rise of the Press: Britain and France, 1620-1800 (1996) 9005.c.5279 (RR) Levy, F. J., ‘How Information Spread Among the Gentry, 1550-1640’, Journal of British Studies, 21 (1982) Pettegree, A., The Invention of News (2014) 705.c.201.29 (NW1 corridor) Randall, D., 'Joseph Mead, Novellante: News, Sociability and Credibility in Early Stuart England', Journal of British Studies, 45 (2006) Raymond, J., The Invention of the Newspaper: English Newsbooks, 1641-1649 (1996) 705.4.c.95.167 (NW1 corridor) Raymond, J., ed., News, Newspapers, and Society in Early Modern Britain (1999) 705.4.c.95.203 (NW1 corridor) Raymond, J. ed., News Networks in Seventeenth-Century Britain and Europe (2006) 705.4.b.200.8 (NW1) Sommerville, J. J., The News Revolution in England (1996) 705.4.c.95.166 (NW1 corridor) Sullivan, A., ed., British Literary Magazines, 1698-1788 (1983). R718.235 (RR) Sutherland, J., The Restoration Newspaper and its Development (1986) 705.4.c.95.102 (NW1 corridor) Walker, R. B., ‘Advertising in London Newspapers, 1650-1750’, Business History, 15 (1973) Wiles, R. M., Serial Publication in England before 1750 (1957). B150.718.72 9. Official printing and government information Blayney, P. M. W., ‘William Cecil and the Stationers’, in R. Myers & M. Harris, eds., The Stationers’ Company and the book trade, 1550-1990 (1997) B260.12; 864.c.134 (WR) Cromartie, A. D. T., ‘The Printing of Parliamentary Speeches, November 1640 - July 1642’, Historical Journal, 33 (1990). Downie, J. A., Robert Harley and the Press (1979) 543.5.c.95.16 (NF4) Elton, G. R. ‘The Sessional Printing of Statutes, 1484-1547’, in E. Ives, R. J. Knecht, & J. J. Scarisbrick, eds., Wealth and Power in Tudor England (1978) 542.22.c.95.21 (NF4) Goldgar, B. A., Walpole and the Wits (1977) 730.c.97.2133 (NW3) Hanson, L., Government and the Press, 1695-1763 (1936). B841.1 King, J. N., ‘Freedom of the Press, Protestant Propaganda and Protector Somerset’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 40 (1976) King, J. N., English Reformation Literature: The Tudor Origins of the Protestant Tradition (1982). 730.2.c.95.6 (NW3) King, J. N., ‘The Book Trade under Edward VI and Mary I’, in CHBB 3. King, J. N. (2001). ""The Light of Printing": William Tyndale, John Foxe, John Day, and Early Modern Print Culture’, Renaissance Quarterly, 54 (2001) King, J. N., ‘John Day: Master Printer of the English Reformation’, in P. Marshall & A. Ryrie, eds., The Beginnings of English Protestantism (2002) 118.7.c.200.10 (SW4) Knights, M., ‘Parliament, Print, and Corruption in Later Stuart Britain’, Parliamentary History, 26 (2007) Loach, J., ‘The Marian Establishment and the Printing Press’, English Historical Review, 101 (1986)

Loach, J., ‘Pamphlets and Politics, 1553-1558’, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, 48 (1975) Peacey, J., ‘Cromwellian England: A Propaganda State?’, History, 91 (2006) Peacey, J., Politicians and Pamphleteers: Propaganda during the English Civil Wars and Interregnum (2004) 543.4.c.200.10 (NF4) Rees, G., & Wakely, M., Publishing, Politics, and Culture: the King’s Printers in the Age of James VI and I (2010) 850.c.805 (WR) Schwoerer, L., ‘Propaganda in the Revolution of 1688-1689’, American Historical Review, 77 (1977) Speck, W. A., ‘Political Propaganda in Augustan England’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society (1972) Case study: Foxe’s Book of Martyrs: Evenden, E., & Freeman, T. S., Religion and the Book: the Making of John Foxe’s Book of Martyrs (2011) 433.c.201.17 (NF1) Evenden, E., Patents, Printers, and Patronage: John Day and the Tudor Book Trade (2008) 864.c.149 (WR) Evenden, E., ‘Closing the Books: The Problematic Printing of John Foxe's Histories of Henry VII and Henry VIII in his Book of Martyrs (1570)’ in J. N. King, ed., Tudor Books and Readers (2010) 730.2.c.201.1 (NW3) King, J. N., Foxe’s Book of Martyrs and Early Modern Print Culture (2006) 433.b.200.13 (NF1)

10. Censorship and regulation of the press Baron, S. A., ‘Licensing Readers …’ in Anderson & Sauer, eds., Books and Readers (2002) 850.c.595 (WR) Clare, J., Art Made Tongue-Tied by Authority: Elizabethan and Jacobean Censorship (1990). 723.13.c.95.10 (NW3) Clegg, C. S., Press Censorship in Elizabethan England (1997) 705.4.c.200.15 (NW1 corridor) Clegg, C. S., Press Censorship in Jacobean England (2001) 705.4.c.200.15 (NW1 corridor) Clegg, C. S., Press Censorship in Caroline England (2008) 543.1.c.200.45 (NF4) Colclough, D., Freedom of Speech in Early Stuart England (2006) 211.c.200.608 (SW5) Duke, A. C., & Tamse, C. A., eds., Too Mighty to be Free: Censorship and the Press in Britain and the Netherlands (1987), chs. by Gibbs and Worden; 900.1.c.428 (RR); 211.c.98.341 (SW5) Foxon, D. F., Libertine Literature in England, 1660-1745 (1965) S727.c.96.21 (WR) Hadfield, A., ed., Literature and Censorship in Renaissance England (2001): Intro. & chs by Hunt & Patterson; 730.4.c.200.98 (NW3) Hill, C., ‘Censorship and English Literature’, Collected Essays, vol. 1 (1985) 543.1.c.95.41 (NF4); 1989.8.315 (WR) Lambert, S., ‘The Printers and the Government, 1604-1637’, in R. Myers & M. Harris, eds., Aspects of Printing from 1600 (1987) 1990.8.4331 (WR) Loades, D., ‘The Theory and Practice of Censorship in Sixteenth-Century England’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 24 (1974) Loades, D., Politics, Censorship, and the English Reformation (1991) 118.7.c.95.84 (SW4) McElligott, J., Royalism, Print, and Censorship in Revolutionary England (2007) 730.4.c.200.602 (NW3) Patterson, A., Censorship and Interpretation: The Conditions of Writing and Reading in Early Modern England (1984) 730.4.c.200.98 (NW2) Shuger, D., Censorship and Cultural Sensibility: the Regulation of Language in Tudor-Stuart England (2006) Siebert, F. S., Freedom of the Press in England, 1476-1776 (1952) Mor.21.10 (Rare Books Room) Primary sources: Milton, John, Areopagitica (1644) – many modern editions, including in vol. 2 of next item Kemp, G. & J. McElligott, et al., eds., Censorship and the Press, 1580-1720, 4 vols. (2009) 211.c.200.11981201 (SW5) 11. Print and the nation, and print beyond the nation Anderson, B., Imagined Communities (1983) 206.c.99.120 (SW5); 206.d.98.29 (SW5) Fox, A., ‘Printed Questionnaires, Research Networks and the Discovery of the British Isles, 1650-1800’, Historical Journal, 53 (2010) Hofmeyr, I., The Portable Bunyan: a Transnational History of the Pilgrim’s Progress (2003) [not yet in UL] Sher, R. B., The Enlightenment and the Book: Scottish Authors and Their Publishers in Eighteenth-Century Britain, Ireland, and America (2006) 551.1.c.200.8 (NF4); C205.c.1203 (RR) Sweet, R., Antiquaries: the Discovery of the Past in Eighteenth-Century Britain (2004) 500.1.c.200.82 (NF3)

11 Early Modern America: Amory, H., ‘British Books Abroad: the American Colonies’, in CNBB, 4. Amory, H., & Hall, D., eds., The Colonial Book in the Atlantic World (2010) B530.11 Armstrong, C., ‘The Bookseller and the Pedlar: the Spread of Knowledge of the New World in Early Modern England, 1580-1640’, in J. Hinks & C. Armstrong, eds., Printing Places: Locations of Book Production and Distribution since 1500 (2005) B260.24 Armstrong, C., Writing North America in the Seventeenth Century: English Representations in Print and Manuscript (2007) 730.35.c.200.417 (NW3) Bremer, F. J., ‘Foxe in the Wilderness: the Book of Martyrs in Seventeenth-century New England’, in D. Loades, D., ed., John Foxe at Home and Abroad (2004) 119.3.c.200.2 (SW4) Green, J., ‘The British Book in North America’, in CHBB 5. Greenspan, N., ‘News and the Politics of Information in the Mid-Seventeenth Century: the Western Design and the Conquest of Jamaica, History Workshop Journal, 69 (2010) Greenspan, N., Selling Cromwell’s Wars: Media, Empire and Godly Warfare, 1650-1658 (2012) 200.3.c.201.321 (SW5) McKitterick, D., ‘Books for Barbados and the British Atlantic Colonies in the Early Eighteenth Century’, Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, 118 (2008) Nelson, C., ‘American Readership of Early British Serials’, in R. Myers & M. Harris, eds., Serials and their Readers, 1620-1914 (1993) 705.4.c.95.211 & 150 (NW1 corridor) Raven, J., & L. Howsam, eds., Books between Europe and the Americas: Connections and Communities, 1620-1860 (2011) 433.c.201.18 (NF1) Continental Europe: Fabian, B., & Spieckermann, M. D., ‘The English Book on the Continent’, in CHBB 5. Hoftijzer, P. J., ‘British Books Abroad: the Continent’, in CHBB 4. Jones, E. A. & Walsham, A., eds., Syon Abbey and its Books: Reading, Writing and Religion, c.1400-1700 (2010) 108.7.c.201.1 (SW4) King, J. N., & Rankin, M., ‘Print, Patronage and the Reception of Continental Reform, 1521-1603’, Yearbook of English Studies, 38 (2008) MacLean, I., Learning and the Marketplace: Essays in the History of the Early Modern Book (2009) 433.c.200.85 (NF1) Pettegree, A., The Book in the Renaissance (2010), esp. Ch. 4 Salman, J., & Raymond, J., Pedlars and the Popular Press: Itinerant Distribution Networks in England and the Netherlands, 1600-1850 (2014) 433.c.201.62 (NF1)

12. Libraries and book collecting Use also the section on ‘Catalogues of Early Modern Libraries’ at the end: sample these, for case studies. Birrell, T. A., English Monarchs and their Books: From Henry VII to Charles II (1987) Uc.9.1971 (RR) Carley, J. P., The Books of Henry VIII and his Wives (2004) 9852.b.2712 (Commonwealth Room) Clark, P., ‘The Ownership of Books in England’, in L. Stone, ed., Schooling and Society (1976) 240.c.97.1461 (SW6) Ellis, M., ‘Coffeehouse Libraries in Mid-Eighteenth-Century London’, The Library, 10 (2009) Hunter, M., et al., eds., A Radical’s Books: The Library Catalogue of Samuel Jeake of Rye (1999) 887.c.82 (WR) Landon, R., ‘The Antiquarian Trade in Britain, 1695-1830: the Use of Auctions and Booksellers Catalogues’, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 89 (1995) Laslett, P., ‘Introduction’ in Laslett & Harrison, J., The Library of John Locke (1965) B990.7.17; 9850.b.336 (RR) Leedham-Green, E., & Webber, T., eds., The Cambridge History of Libraries in Britain and Ireland, Vol. 1, to 1640 (2006) B910.8; 9852.c.270.22 (Commonwealth Rm); 2014.9.2560-1 (WR) Mandelbrote, G., & Taylor, B., eds, Libraries within the Library: the Origins of the British Library's Printed Collections (2009). B920.3 McKitterick, D., ‘“Ovid with a Littleton”: The Cost of English books in the Early Seventeenth Century’, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society, 11 (1997) McKitterick, D., ‘Women and their Books in the Seventeenth Century: The Case of Elizabeth Puckering’, The Library, 1 (2000) Mandelbrote, G., & Manley, K. A., eds., The Cambridge History of Libraries in Britain and Ireland, Vol. 2, 16401850 (2006) B910.9; 9852.c.270.23 (Commonwealth Rm); 2014.9.2560-1 (WR)

Morgan, P., ‘Frances Wolfreston and ‘Hor Bouks’: A Seventeenth-Century Woman Book-Collector’, The Library, 11 (1989) Pearson, D., Provenance Research in Book History (1994) B873.26; 2000.8.6296 (WR) Scott-Warren, J., ‘Books in the Bedchamber: Religion, Accounting, and the Library of Richard Stonley’, in J. N. King, ed., Tudor Books and Readers (2010) 730.2.c.201.1 (NW3) Scott-Warren, J., Sir John Harington and the Book as Gift (2001) 730.4.c.200.50 (NW3) Scott-Warren, J., ‘News, Sociability, and Bookbuying in Early Modern England: the Letters of Sir Thomas Cornwallis’, The Library, 1 (2000) Stern, V. F., Gabriel Harvey: His Life, Marginalia, and Library (1979) 457.c.97.906 (NF2) Walsby, M., & Constantinidou, N., eds., Documenting the Early Modern Book World (2013) 850.c.890 (WR) 13. The literature of religious identity: popular piety, nonconformity, and Catholicism Craig, J., ‘Forming a Protestant Consciousness? Erasmus’ Paraphrases in English Parishes, 1547-1650’, in H. M. Pabel, ed., Holy Scripture Speaks: The Production and Reception of Erasmus’ Paraphrases on the New Testament (2002). 61.01.c.8.14 (SW3) Crick, J., & Walsham, A., eds., The Uses of Script and Print, 1300-1700 (2004). 433.c.200.37 (NF1) Green, I., Print and Protestantism in Early Modern England (2000) 155.5.c.200.4 (SW4) Green, I., The Christian’s ABC: Catechisms and Catechizing in England, 1530-1740 (1996) 127.8.c.95.2 (SW4) Green, I., & Peters, K., ‘Religious Publishing in England, 1640-1695’, in CHBB 4. Hughes, A., ‘Gangraena’ and the Struggle for the English Revolution (2004) 543.4.c.200.13 (NF4) Hughes, A., ‘Print, Persecution and Polemic: Thomas Edwards’ Gangraena (1646) and Civil War Sectarianism’, in J. Crick & A. Walsham, eds., The Uses of Script and Print, 1300-1700 (2004) 433.c.200.37 (NF1) Hughes, A., ‘Approaches to Presbyterian Print Culture: Thomas Edwards’s Gangraena as a Source and Text’, in J. Andersen and E. Sauer, eds., Books and Readers in Early Modern England (2002) 850.c.595 (WR) Keeble, N. H., The Literary Culture of Nonconformity in Later Seventeenth Century England (1987) 730.2.c.95.96 (NW3) Lake, P., & Questier, M., The Anti-Christ’s Lewd Hat: Protestants, Papists and Players in Post-Reformation England (2002) 118.7.c.200.14 (SW4) Lake, P., ‘Anti-Popery: the Structure of a Prejudice’ in R. Cust & A. Hughes (eds.), Conflict in early Stuart England 1603-42 (1989) 543.15.c.95.23 (NF4) Lake, P., ‘Anti-Puritanism: the Structure of a Prejudice’, in K. Fincham & P. Lake, eds., Religious Politics in Post-Reformation England (2006) 119.1.c.200.12 (SW4) Lake, P., ‘Religion and Cheap Print’, in J. Raymond, ed., The Oxford History of Popular Print Culture, vol. 1: Cheap Print in Britain and Ireland to 1660 (2011) 727.13.b.201.1 (NW3) Peters, K., Print Culture and the Early Quakers (2005) 141.3.c.200.6 (SW4) Walsham, A., ‘“Justification by Print Alone?” Protestantism, Literacy and Communications in the AngloAmerican World of John Winthrop’, in F. J. Bremer & L. Botelho, eds., The World of John Winthrop: Essays on England and New England, 1588-1649 (2006) 669.15.c.200.32 (NWG) Watt, T., Cheap Print and Popular Piety, 1550-1640 (1991) 542.22.c.95.41 (NF4) Catholic printing: Walsham, A., ‘The Spider and the Bee: the Perils of Printing for Refutation in Tudor England’, in J. King, ed., Tudor Books and Readers (2010) 730.2.c.201.1 (NW3) Walsham, A., Hunt, A., & Collinson, C., ‘Religious Publishing in England, 1557-1640’, in CHBB 4. Walsham, A., ‘“Domme Preachers”?: Post-Reformation English Catholicism and the Culture of Print’, Past & Present, 168 (2000) 14. Non-textual print: woodcuts and cartoons Aspital, A. W., Catalogue of the Pepys Library at Magdalene College, Pt 3: Prints and Drawings (1981) B884.PEP.3 Clayton, T., ‘Book Illustration and the World of Prints’, in CHBB, 5 Driver, M., The Image in Print: Book Illustration in Late Medieval England and its Sources (2004) B776.7 George, D., English Political Caricature, vol 1. (1959) 4040.47.c.95.11 (SF6); 5540.c.95.35 (WR) Hunter, M., ed., Printed Images in Early Modern England (2010) 4040.5.b.201.1 (SF6) Jones, M., The Print in Early Modern England (2010) S950.a.201.34 (WR)

13 King, J. N., ‘Reading the Woodcuts in John Foxe’s Book of Martyrs’, in J. N. King, ed., Tudor Books and Readers (2010) 730.2.c.201.1 (NW3) Knoppers, L. L., Constructing Cromwell: Ceremony, Portrait, and Print (2000) 543.45.b.200.1 (NF4) Kunzle, D., The Early Comic Strip (1973) S4040.45.a.9.11 (WR) Miller, J., ed., Religion in the Popular Prints, 1600-1832 (1986) S404.47.b.9.29 (WR) Pierce, H., Unseemly Pictures: Graphic Satire and Politics in Early Modern England (2008) 543.1.b.200.8 (NF4) Sharpe, J. A., Crime and the Law in the English Satirical Print, 1600-1832 (1986) S4040.47.b.9.30 (WR) Simone, D. de, et al., eds., A Heavenly Craft: the Woodcut in Early Printed Books (2004) C200.b.4283 (RR); S950.b.200.68 (WR) Stephens, F. J. et al., Catalogue of Political and Personal Satires Preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings of the British Museum, vols. 1-2 (1870-1954) R4040.E20 (RR) Watt., T, Cheap Print and Popular Piety (1991) Whiting, J. R. S., A Handful of History (1978) 9540.c.7.56 (RR) 15. Moral panic and the literature of demonization Knights, M., ‘Historical Stereotypes and Histories of Stereotypes’, in C. Tileaga & J. Byford, eds., Psychology and History: Interdisciplinary Explorations (2014) 500.1.c.201.105 (NF3) Loveman, K., Reading Fictions, 1660-1740: Deception in English Literary and Political Culture (2008) 753.13.c.200.125 (NW3) Walker, C., ed., Moral Panics, the Press, and the Law in Early Modern England (2009) 560.6.c.200.50 (NF4) Case study: the Marprelate tracts: Black., J., ed., The Martin Marprelate Tracts: a Modernized and Annotated Edition (2008), Intro. 115.5.c.200.13 (SW4) Black, J., ‘The Rhetoric of Reaction: the Martin Marprelate Tracts (1588-1589), Anti-Martinism, and the Uses of Print in Early Modern England’, Sixteenth Century Journal, 28 (1997) Cummings, B., ‘Martin Marprelate and the Popular Voice’, in C. Cooper, and J. Gregory, eds., Elite and Popular Religion (Studies in Church History, 42) (2006) 60.01.c.15.42 (SW3) Smith, N., ‘Richard Overton’s Marpriest Tracts: Towards a History of Leveller Style’, Prose Studies, 9 (1986) Case study: the sects and the Ranters: Davis, J. C., Fear, Myth, and History: the Ranters and the Historians (1986) [missing from UL] Davis, J. C., ‘Fear, Myth and Furore: Reappraising the Ranters’, Past & Present, 129 (1990) Hughes, A., Gangraena and the Struggle for the English Revolution (2004) 543.4.c.200.13 (NF4) McGregor, J. F., et al., ‘Fear, Myth and Furore: Reappraising the Ranters’, Past & Present, 140 (1993) Case study: anti-popery: Andersen, J., ‘Anti-Puritanism, Anti-Popery, and Gallows Rhetoric in Thomas Nashe's The Unfortunate Traveller’, Sixteenth Century Journal, 35 (2004) Dunan-Page, A., & Lynch, B., eds., Roger L’Estrange and the Making of Restoration Culture (2008) 543.62.c.200.13 (NF4) Hinds, P., The Horrid Popish Plot: Roger L’Estrange and the Circulation of Political Discourse in SeventeenthCentury London (2009) 543.6.c.201.12 (NF4) Knights, M., ‘Possessing the Visual: the Materiality of Visual Print Culture in Later Stuart Britain’, in J. Daybell & P. Hinds, eds., Material Readings of Early Modern Culture: Texts and Social Practices, 1580-1730 (2010) C205.c.3765 (RR) Walker, C., ‘Remember Justice Godfrey”: the Popish Plot and the Construction of Panic in Seventeenthcentury Media’, in C. Walker & D. Lemmings, eds., Moral Panics, the Press and the Law in Early Modern England (2009) 560.6.c.200.50 (NF4) Randall, S., ‘Newspapers and their Publishers during the Popish Plot and Exclusion Crisis’, in J. Hinks & C. Armstrong, eds., Book Trade Connections from the Seventeenth to the Twentieth centuries (2008) B260.26 Schwoerer, L., The Ingenious Mr Henry Care, Restoration Publicist (2001), Ch. 3: 705.6.c.200.15 (NW1) Suarez, M. F., ‘A Crisis in English Public Life: the Popish Plot, Naboth’s Vineyard (1679), and Mock-biblical Satire’s Exemplary Redress’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 67 (2004) Weil, R., ‘”If I did say so, I lyed”: Elizabeth Cellier and the Construction of Credibility in the Popish Plot Crisis’, in S. Amussen & M. Kishlansky, eds., Political Culture and Cultural Politics in Early Modern England (1995) [missing from UL]

16. The limits of print?: scribal communities; orality and the aural Scribal publication: Bellany, A., The Politics of Court Scandal in Early Modern England (2002) 543.c.200.2 (NF4) Crick, J., & Walsham, A., eds., The Uses of Script and Print, 1300-1700 (2004). 433.c.200.37 (NF1) Ezell, M., Social Authorship and the Advent of Print (1999) 730.4.c.95.782 (NW3) Love, H., Scribal Publication in Seventeenth-Century England (1993). 730.2.c.95.188 (NW3) Marotti, A. F., & Bristol, M. D., eds., Print, Manuscript, and Performance: the Changing Relations of the Media in Early Modern England (2000) 730.4.c.200.20 (NW3) Walsham, A., ‘Preaching without Speaking: Script, Print and Religious Dissent’, in J. Crick & A. Walsham, eds., The Uses of Script and Print, 1300-1700 (2004) 433.c.200.37 (NF1) Woodhuysen, H., Sir Philip Sidney and the Circulation of Manuscripts (1996) 721.21.c.95.77 (NW2) Orality: Fox, A., Oral and Literate Culture in England, 1500-1700 (2000) 474.6.c.200.4 (NF3); 2004.8.9070 (WR) Fox, A., ‘The Authority of the Written Word’ in A. Fox, P. Griffiths, & S. Hindle, eds., The Experience of Authority in Early Modern England (1996) 542.22.c.95.48 (NF4) Hunt, A., The Art of Hearing: English Preachers and their Audiences, 1590-1640 (2010) 55.3.c.201.1 (SW3) Ong, W., Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word (1982) 701.15.d.95.623 (NW1 corridor); 9700.d.4396 (RR); C203.d.2027 (RR) Wood, A., The Memory of the People: Custom and Popular Senses of the Past in Early Modern England (2013), Ch. 5: 708.45.c.201.27 (NW2) Sermon culture: Ferrell, L. A., & P. E. McCullough, eds., The English Sermon Revised (2001) 542.1.c.200.3 (NF4) Francis, K. A. & W. Gibson, eds., The Oxford Handbook of the British Sermon, 1689-1901 (2012) 55.5.b.201.2 (SW3); 2014.9.4252 (WR) Hughes, A., ‘Preachers and Hearers in Revolutionary London: Contextualising Parliamentary Fast Sermons’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 24 (2014) McCullough, P., H. Adlington, & E. Rhatigan, eds., The Oxford Handbook of the Early Modern Sermon (2011) 55.5.b.201.1 (SW3) Morrissey, M., Politics and the Paul’s Cross Sermons, 1558-1642 (2011) 55.5.c.201.5 (SW3) Primary source online: English Broadside Ballad Archive: ebba.english.ucsb.edu Primary source in print: Lord, G. de F. et al., eds., Poems on Affairs of State, 6 vols. (1963-70) – Augustan political satire, often libellous, mostly originally circulated in manuscript : 721.c.96.38- (NW2) Reference Works and Further Primary Sources These cover the whole paper Alston, R. C., Inventory of Sale Catalogues, 1676-1800, 2 vols. (2010). B885.27-8 Anon., Transcript of the Registers of the Stationers Company, 1640-1708, 3 vols. (1913-14). B261a.13-15 Arber, E., A Transcript of the Registers of the Stationers Company, 1554-1640, 5 vols., (1875-94). B261.1-5 Arber, E., The Term Catalogues, 1668-1709, 3 vols. (1903-6). B261a.1-3 Bosanquet, E. F., English Printed Almanacks and Prognostications (1917). B160.1 Dahl, F., A Bibliography of English Corantos and Periodical Newsbooks, 1620-1642 (1952). B170.1 Elsworth, J. W., The Bagford Ballads, 2 vols. (1968) 721.c.96.145-6 Fehrenbach, R. J., & Leedham-Green, E. S., eds., Private Libraries in Renaissance England, 7 vols. (19922009). B196.6-12. Foxon, D. F., English Verse, 1701-1750, 2 vols. (1975). B150.721.8 Gillett, C. R., Burned Books, 2 vols. (1932). B741.2-3 Greg, W. W., Licensers for the Press ... to 1640: a Biographical Index (1962) McKenzie, D. F., & Bell, M., A Chronology and Calendar of Documents Relating to the London Book Trade, 1641-1700, 2 vols. (2005). B261.22-4 McKenzie, D. F., & Ross, J. C., A Ledger of Charles Ackers (1968). B990.7.19 Madan, F. F., A New Bibliography of the Eikon Basilike of King Charles I (1950). B151.CHA.1 Maslen, K., & Lancaster, J., The Bowyer Ledgers (1991). B285.BOW.1 Nelson, C., & Seccombe, M., British Newspapers and Periodicals, 1641-1700 (1987). B170.16 Steele, R., Bibliography of Royal Proclamations of the Tudor and Stuart Sovereigns, 2 vols. (1910). B195a.1011

15 Suarez, M. F., & Woodhuysen, H. R., eds., Oxford Companion to the Book, 2 vols. (2010). B211.33-4 Various, Dictionary of Printers and Booksellers [variant titles], 9 vols. (1895-1932). B263.1-9 Catalogues of Early Modern Libraries Institutional libraries: Ipswich Library: B196.17 More Parish, Shropshire: see Condren, C., Library History, 7 (1987) Petyt Library, Skipton, Yorkshire: B930.2 Plume Library, Maldon, Essex: 9850.c.746 (RR) Personal libraries (unless otherwise stated, all at B884): Robert Burton (B990.7.26) William Congreve Robert Hooke William King William King Sir Thomas Knyvett John Locke (B990.7.17) James Logan (B890.9.3) Samuel Pepys Adam Smith Anthony Wood (B990.7.32)

John Dee Samuel Jeake John, Lord Lumley Isaac Newton Jonathan Swift

Burton, R., et al., eds., Private Libraries in Renaissance England: A Collection and Catalogue of Tudor and Early Stuart Book-Lists, 5 vols. B195.6: now online at http://plre.folger.edu/ Jayne, S., Library Catalogues of the English Renaissance, 2e (1983) Leedham-Green, E., ed., Books in Cambridge Inventories, 2 vols. (1987) A660.49 (MS Room) Also: go online to EEBO or ECCO and look up examples by searching on ‘Catalogue’. And the Virtual Library System for the Dissenting Academy Libraries: vls.english.qmul.ac.uk

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