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Lost books printed in French before 1601
Author(s)
Date Issued
2009-06
Date Available
2012-07-19T16:23:31Z
Abstract
Research into the history of the book before 1601 has reached an important moment. Within five years, scholars will have at their disposal short title catalogues covering almost all of the print domains of Europe. Such significant advances in research infrastructure will fundamentally transform our understanding of the first great age of print. It is, therefore, timely, that we begin to address one of the most inconvenient of truths – the issue of lost books. This article focuses on publishing in French as a case study. This is a particularly fertile avenue of investigation because of the existence of two exceptional sources – short title catalogues of French books published in the 1580s. By mapping the entries in these sources to the most recent short title catalogue of French print published in 2007, we can begin to explore the extent and character of the survival and loss of vernacular print in this period.
Sponsorship
Not applicable
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Journal
The Library
Volume
10
Issue
2
Start Page
188
End Page
205
Copyright (Published Version)
2009 The Bibliographical Society (typography) and the contributors (content)
Subject – LCSH
Lost books--Case studies
Books--History--1450-1600
French literature--Bibliography--Early
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0024-2160
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
WilkinsonLostBooks.pdf
Size
276.38 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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