Title pages: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Created page with "Eisenstein 1983 -- "Most studies of printing have, quite rightly, singled out the regular provision of title pages as the most significant new feature associated with the...") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Eisenstein 1983]] -- "Most studies of printing have, quite rightly, singled out the regular provision of title pages as the most significant new feature associated with the printed book format. How the title page contributed to the cataloguing of books and the bibliographer's craft scarcely needs to be spelled out. How it contributed to new habits of placing and dating, in general, does, I think, call for further thought." | [[Eisenstein 1983]] -- "Most studies of printing have, quite rightly, singled out the regular provision of title pages as the most significant new feature associated with the printed book format. How the title page contributed to the cataloguing of books and the bibliographer's craft scarcely needs to be spelled out. How it contributed to new habits of placing and dating, in general, does, I think, call for further thought." | ||
[[Pollard 1891|Pollard, A. W. ''Last Words on the History of the Title-Page.'' London: Nimmo, 1891.]] |
Revision as of 11:45, 21 July 2017
Eisenstein 1983 -- "Most studies of printing have, quite rightly, singled out the regular provision of title pages as the most significant new feature associated with the printed book format. How the title page contributed to the cataloguing of books and the bibliographer's craft scarcely needs to be spelled out. How it contributed to new habits of placing and dating, in general, does, I think, call for further thought."
Pollard, A. W. Last Words on the History of the Title-Page. London: Nimmo, 1891.