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Bibliographies

Bibliographies

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Library history

  • Abbott, J. A., et al., eds., Evergreen: The Garrett Family, Collectors and Connoisseurs (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2017).
  • Alman, S. W., ed., School Librarianship: Past, Present, and Future (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2017).
  • Alsemgeest, A., ‘Dutch Connections in Swedish Collections’, Jaarboek voor Nederlandse Boekgeschiedenis, 23 (2016): 33–52.
  • Ames, A. L., ‘Mrs F.D.R.’s Bookplate’, The Bookplate Journal, 25 (2016): 46–53.
  • Augst, T., ‘New Histories of the Public Library in the United States’, Reviews in American History, 45 (2017): 40–49, doi:10.1353/rah.2017.0006.
  • Baker, K., On the Burning of Books (London: Unicorn, 2016).
  • Black, A., ‘Libraries of Light’, in Kimball and Wisser (op. cit.), 124–152.
  • Boserup, I., ‘A Life for Libraries and Written Cultural Heritage: Erland Kolding Nielsen—13 January 1947 to 22 January 2017’, CERL Newsletter, 35 (2017): 2.
  • Bowman, J. H., ed., British Librarianship and Information Work, 2011–2015 (London: J. H. Bowman, 2017).
  • Bristow, J., and N. Rebecca, ‘Mitchell, “The Provenance of Oscar Wilde's “Decay of Lying’”, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 111 (2017): 221–240, doi:10.1086/691557.
  • Browndorf, M. A., ‘World War II and the Building of the Ukrainian Library’, in Kimball and Wisser (op. cit.), 108–123.
  • Burga, C. A., ‘Die NGZH-Vertretung in der Bibliothekskommission und der St. Galler Globus’, in Stucki and Schwyzer (op. cit.), 75–84.
  • Butler, W. E., ‘Bookplates in Books: Handbooks for Provenance Studies’, The Bookplate Journal, 15 (2017): 54–61.
  • ———, ‘The Jacob (James) Bruce Bookplate: A Russian Ex Libris Incunabulum’, The Bookplate Journal, 15 (2017): 40–45.
  • Campbell, D. M., ‘Henry E. Huntington's Chinese Book: A Bibliographical Note’, Script & Print, 40 (2017): 239–255.
  • Carley, J. P., ‘Thomas Wolsey's Epistle and Gospel Lectionaries: Unanswered Questions and New Hypotheses’, Bodleian Library Record, 28 (2015):135–151.
  • Carmassi, P., ‘Through the Hands of Librarians and Booksellers: Examples of Recent Changes in Medieval Manuscripts of German Collections’, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 111 (2017): 167–184, doi:10.1086/691722.
  • Challinor, J., ‘A Manuscript of Rochester's “Upon Nothing” in a Newly Recovered Eighteenth-Century Miscellany of Restoration Verse’, The Seventeenth Century 32 (2017): 161–190, doi:10.1080/0268117X.2017.1279075.
  • Ciccolella, F., ‘Greek in Venetian Crete: Grammars and Schoolbooks from the Library of Francesco Barocci’, in Ciccolella and Silvano (op. cit.), 371–394.
  • Ciccolella, F., and L. Silvano, eds., Teachers, Students, and Schools of Greek in the Renaissance, Brill's Studies in Intellectual History, 264 (Leiden: Brill, 2017).
  • Cope, J., ‘Libraries, Knowledge and the Common Good’, in Kimball and Wisser (op. cit.), 56–69.
  • Crackel, T. J., V. Fredrick Rickey, and J. S. Silverberg, ‘Provenance Lost? George Washington's Books and Papers Lost, Found, and (on Occasion) Lost Again’, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 111 (2017): 203–220, doi:10.1086/691826.
  • Dalbello, M., ‘Ellis Island Library’, in Kimball and Wisser (op. cit.), 28–55.
  • De Ritter, R., Imagining Women Readers, 1789–1820: Well-Regulated Minds (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2015).
  • Delbourgo, J., Collecting the World: The Life and Curiosity of Hans Sloane (London: Allen Lane, 2017).
  • Delsalle, P., A History of Archival Practice, trans. by Margaret Procter (Abingdon: Routledge, 2017).
  • Diao, J., ‘The Absence of Public Libraries in Imperial China: An Alternative Interpretation of Chinese Writing’, Library & Information History, 33 (2017): 195–214, doi:10.1080/17583489.2017.1334910.
  • Dirda, M., ‘Night Manager at Quill & Brush: The Making of a Book Collector’, The Book Collector, 66 (2017): 349–361.
  • Malvadi, D., Arantxa, ‘Victoria Eugenia de Battenberg: Libros y Lecturas d e una Inglesa en la Corte Española’, Titivillus, 3 (2017): 117–144.
  • Duroselle-Melish, C., ‘Anatomy of a Pamphlet Collection: From Disbinding to Reuniting’, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 111 (2017): 185–202, doi:10.1086/691727.
  • Eardley, A., ‘“Shut up in a Countrey Grange”: The Provenance of Lady Hester Pulter's Poetry and Prose and Women's Literary History’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 80 (2017): 345–359, doi:10.1353/hlq.2017.0020.
  • Foster, A.-M., ‘“I Am Sending Herewith”—First World War Ephemera at the British Library’, Electronic British Library Journal 2017: article 3.
  • Géhin, P., Lire le Manuscrit Médiéval: Observer et Décrire (Malakoff: A. Colin, 2017).
  • Hammerly, D., ‘The Córdovan Library of Caliph Al-Hakam II’, in Kimball and Wisser (op. cit.), 4–15.
  • Hansen, H., ‘Buying and Borrowing Books: Book Consumption in Late Nineteenth-Century Sweden’, Papers of The Bibliographical Society of Canada 54 (2017): 121–154.
  • Havens, E., and A. Sia, ‘“A Memorial to My Family”: The John Work Garrett Library of Rare Books and Manuscripts’, in Abbot et al. (op. cit.), 157–198.
  • Hayes, K. J., George Washington: A Life in Books (New York: Oxford University Press, 2017).
  • Hines, B., ‘Juliette Recamier's Library’, Library & Information History Group Newsletter, Ser. 4 (2017): 6–7.
  • Houston, L., ‘(Il)Legal Deposits: Ulysses and the Copyright Libraries’, The Library, 18 (2017): 131–151, doi:10.1093/library/18.2.131.
  • Houston, L., ‘Towards a History of the Phi Collection (1882–1945)’, Bodleian Library Record, 28 (2015): 179–194.
  • Jones, E., ‘The Public Library Movement, the Digital Library Movement, and the Large-Scale Digitization Initiative: Assumptions, Intentions, and the Role of the Public’, Information & Culture, 52 (2017): 229–263, doi:10.1353/lac.2017.0009.
  • Jones, P. A., Jr., ‘Elizabeth Cleveland Morriss (1877–1960), Leader of the Literacy and Adult Elementary Education Movement in North Carolina’, Information & Culture, 52 (2017): 186–206, doi:10.1353/lac.2017.0007.
  • Kerr, D. J., ‘For the Boys Over There! The Churchill Auction of Books and Pictures in New Zealand, 1942’, Script & Print, 40 (2017): 222–238.
  • Kiessling, N. K., ‘James Molloy and Sales of Recusant Books to the United States’, The Catholic Historical Review, 102 (2016): 545–580, doi:10.1353/cat.2016.0141.
  • Kimball, M. A., and K. M. Wisser, eds., Libraries—Traditions and Innovations: Papers From the Library History Seminar XIII (Berlin: De Gruyter Saur, 2017).
  • Kline, S., ‘The Library as Scholarly Publisher: An Informal History of the Bulletin of the New York Public Library’, Public Libraries, 56 (2017): 31–35.
  • Lakuš, J., and A. Bajić, ‘Interpreting Diaries: History of Reading and the Diary of the Nineteenth-Century Croatian Female Writer Dragojla Jarnević’, Information & Culture, 52 (2017): 163–185, doi:10.1353/lac.2017.0006.
  • Lasner, M. S., ‘A Collector Reflects on Provenance’, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 111 (2017): 241–253, doi:10.1086/691998.
  • Laux, F., ed., Bordeaux, les clés du trésor: 800 ans d'histoire des archives de la ville (Bordeaux: le Festin, 2016).
  • Leu, U. B., ‘Die Digitalisierung der Bibliothek der NGZH’, in Stucki and Schwyzer (op. cit.), 99–106.
  • Limper-Herz, K., ‘A Masonic Binding for King George III, c. 1794: English & Foreign Bookbindings 130’, The Book Collector, 66 (2017): 387–388.
  • Mahoney, M., ‘The Library as Medicine Cabinet’, in Kimball and Wisser (op. cit.), 100–107.
  • McLaughlin, C. G., The State Library at 200: A Celebration of Library Services to Ohio (Brookfield: Donning, 2017).
  • McLelland, D., ‘The Development of School Libraries in Scottish Burghs Before 1872: A Preliminary Study’, Library & Information History, 33 (2017): 167–181, doi:10.1080/17583489.2017.1334431.
  • Medvedkova, O., ed., Pierre le Grand et ses livres: les arts et les sciences de l'Europe dans la bibliothèque du tsar, La République Européenne des Lettres, 8 (Paris: Baudry, 2016).
  • Mitchell-Powell, B. ‘The 1939 Alexandria, Virginia, Public Library Sit-in Demonstration’, in Kimball and Wisser (op. cit.), 60–99.
  • Morrissey, M., ‘Sermon-Notes and Seventeenth-Century Manuscript Communities’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 80 (2017): 293–307, doi:10.1353/hlq.2017.0017.
  • Muusers, C., Het verleden op je bord: vijf eeuwen receptuur uit de culinaire collectie van de Koninklijke Bibliotheek (Uithoorn: Karakter, 2016).
  • Newsome, H., ‘Reconsidering the Provenance of the Henry VII and Margaret Tudor Book of Hours’, Notes and Queries, 64 (2017): 231–234, doi:10.1093/notesj/gjx056.
  • O'Callaghan, M., ‘Collecting Verse: “Significant Shape” and the Paper-Book in the Early Seventeenth Century’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 80 (2017): 309–324, doi:10.1353/hlq.2017.0018.
  • Ommen, K. V., ‘Early Modern Oriental Collections in Oxford and Leiden: Scaliger, Bodley and Anglo-Dutch Encounters and Exchanges’, Bodleian Library Record, 28 (2015): 152–178.
  • Ommundsen, Å., and T. Heikkilä, eds., Nordic Latin Manuscript Fragments: The Destruction and Reconstruction of Medieval Books (Oxford: Routledge, 2017).
  • Ommundsen, Å., and T. Heikkilä, ‘Piecing Together the Past: The Accidental Manuscript Collections of the North’, in Ommundsen and Heikkilä (op. cit.), 1–23.
  • Otswald, P. D., ‘Stefan George's Circle and the Georg Bondi Editions (1898–1935): Contemporary Collectors LXVI’, The Book Collector, 66 (2017): 401–407.
  • Gracia, P., Manuel José, ‘Los Libros-Herramienta del Jurista Nicholau Barandi n en 1431 en un Documento Inusual’, Titivillus, 3 (2017): 187–190.
  • Potten, E., ‘“The Importance of His Gift Can Scarcely Be Over-Estimated”: The Library of Robert Edward Hart (1878–1946)’, Library & Information History Group Newsletter, Ser. 4 (2017): 2–5.
  • Rasche, A., ‘The Culture of Clothing: On the History of the Fashion Image Collection—Lipperheide Costume Library in Berlin’, Art Libraries Journal, 42 (2017): 162–168, doi:10.1017/alj.2017.23.
  • Reed, C., ‘The Library at Osterley Park: National Trust Libraries 8’, The Book Collector, 66 (2017): 331–346.
  • Reed, M., ‘“Lost in the Fog of the Past”: Introductory Remarks on the Subject of Provenance’, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 111 (2017): 135–142, doi:10.1086/691713.
  • Rutishauser, R., and M. Spinnler, ‘Willkommene Gäste’, in Stucki and Schwyzer (op. cit.), 39–52.
  • Rydell, A. The Book Thieves: The Nazi Looting of Europe's Libraries and the Race to Return a Literary Inheritance, trans. by Henning Koch (New York: Viking, 2017).
  • Scarre, G. ‘“The Compages, the Bonds and Rivets of the Race”: W. E. Gladstone on the Keeping of Books’, Library & Information History, 33 (2017): 182–194, doi:10.1080/17583489.2017.1334860.
  • Schleicher, A. Die Geschichte der Musikbibliothek Peters (Berlin: BibSpider, 2016).
  • Schwyzer, M., ‘Die Bibliothek der NGZH von 1746 bis 1916’, in Stucki and Schwyzer (op. cit.), 11–26.
  • Shaw, D. J., ‘John Mower, Vicar of Tenterden in the Late Fifteenth Century: His Will, His Career and his Library’, The Library, 18 (2017): 152–174, doi:10.1093/library/18.2.152.
  • Sly, J. S., ‘Improve the Moment’, in Kimball and Wisser (op. cit.), 16–27.
  • Smith, N. D., An Actor's Library: David Garrick, Book Collecting and Literary Friendships, (New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll, 2017).
  • Spears, K., An Illustrated History of the Books in the Chained Library of Wells Cathedral, Somerset (Glastonbury: Cechel Books, 2016).
  • Speranzi, D., ‘Praeclara Librorum Suppellectilis: Cretan Manuscripts in Pietro Da Portico's Library’, in Ciccolella and Silvano (op. cit.), 155–212.
  • Stokes, S. S., ‘Documenting the History of the White House Library Fireplace Tiles, 1944–1962’, Art Documentation, 36 (2017): 50–72, doi:10.1086/691372.
  • Stone, Z. E., ‘A Newly Discovered Manuscript of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey's Translation of Martial's Epigram X’, Notes and Queries, 64 (2017): 242–245, doi:10.1093/notesj/gjx042.
  • Stucki, H., ‘Adolf Tobler, Professor für Schwachstromtechnik und Förderer der Zentralbibliothek (1850–1923)’, in Stucki and Schwyzer (op. cit.), 65–74.
  • Stucki, H. ‘Hans Heinrich Koch und die NGZH am Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts’, in Stucki and Schwyzer (op. cit.), 53–64.
  • Stucki, H. ‘Übergabe der Gesellschaftsbibliothek an die Zentralbibliothek’, in Stucki and Schwyzer (op. cit.), 27–38.
  • Stucki, H., and M. Schwyzer, eds., Brennglas des Wissens: hundert Jahre Partnerschaft: Naturforschende Gesellschaft und Zentralbibliothek Zürich, Neujahrsblatt der Naturforschenden Gesellschaft in Zürich, NGZH, 219 (Zürich: Naturforschende Gesellschaft in Zürich, 2017).
  • Thomson, A., ‘Louis Bourguet, John Toland, and the Republic of Letters’, Erudition and the Republic of Letters, 2 (2017): 288–313, doi:10.1163/24055069-00203002.
  • Vecce, C., La biblioteca perduta: i libri di Leonardo, Aculei, 27 (Roma: Salerno editrice, 2017).
  • Vine, A., ‘Search and Retrieval in Seventeenth-Century Manuscripts: The Case of Joseph Hall's Miscellany’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 80 (2017): 325–343, doi:10.1353/hlq.2017.0019.
  • Voit, P., Katalog prvotisků Strahovské knihovny v Praze [‘A catalogue of the incunabula of the Strahov Library in Prague’], Bibliotheca Strahoviensis Series Monographica, 6 (Prague: Královská kanonie premonstrátů na Strahově, 2015).
  • Walta, V., ‘Birgittine Books in the Nordic Fragment Collections’, in Ommundsen and Heikkilä (op. cit.), 239–263.
  • Wartmann, B. A., ‘Naturwissenschaften in der Zentralbibliothek Zürich’, in Stucki and Schwyzer (op. cit.), 85–98.
  • Welch, B., ‘Bookplates for Marguerite and Richard Dorment’, The Bookplate Journal, 15 (2017): 62–63.
  • ———, ‘Ex Libris of John Sadler’, The Bookplate Journal 15 (2017): 65–66.
  • Wells, J., Reading Austen in America (New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2017).
  • Williams, C. B. ‘“This and the Rest Maisters We All May Mende”: Reconstructing the Practices and Anxieties of a Manuscript Miscellany's Reader-Compiler.’ Huntington Library Quarterly, 80 (2017): 277–292, doi:10.1353/hlq.2017.0016.
  • Willoughby, J., ‘Thomas Wolsey and the Books of Cardinal College’, Bodleian Library Record, 28 (2015): 114–134.
  • Zanen, Sv., ‘“Met veel verlangen kijk ik uit naar het verschijnen van dat boek”: De bibliotheek van de plantkundige Carolus Clusius.’ Jaarboek voor Nederlandse Boekgeschiedenis, 23 (2016): 10–31.

Information history

  • Aguerre, C., ‘The Internet in Argentina and Brazil: The Origins of Networking Experiences’, Information & Culture, 52 (2017): 264–294, doi:10.7560/IC52206.
  • Bazin, V., and M. Waters, ‘Mediated and Mediating Feminisms: Periodical Culture from Suffrage to the Second Wave’, Women: A Cultural Review, 27 (2016): 347–358, doi:10.1080/09574042.2017.1301125.
  • Beshero-Bondar, E., and E. Raisanen, ‘Recovering from Collective Memory Loss: The Digital Mitford's Feminist Project’, Women's History Review, 26 (2017): 738–750, doi:10.1080/09612025.2016.1166882.
  • Bishop, C., ‘The Serendipity of Connectivity: Piecing Together Women's Lives in the Digital Archive’, Women's History Review, 26 (2017): 766–780, doi:10.1080/09612025.2016.1166883.
  • Bode, K., ‘Thousands of Titles without Authors: Digitized Newspapers, Serial Fiction, and the Challenges of Anonymity’, Book History, 19 (2016): 284–316, doi:10.1353/bh.2016.0008.
  • Boucher, A., “Les archives de la République populaire de Chine: Raisonner sur et raisonner avec’, Histoire Sociale/Social History, 50 (2017): 141–161, doi: 10.1>353/his.2017.0007.
  • Bowen, L., ‘The Bedlam Academy: Royalist Oxford in Civil War News Culture’, Media History, 23 (2017): 199–217, doi:10.1080/13688804.2016.1270747.
  • Brügger, N., and R. Schroeder, The Web as History: Using Web Archives to Understand the Past and the Present (London: UCL Press, 2017).
  • Candiani, V. S., ‘Reframing Knowledge in Colonization: Plebeians and Municipalities in the Environmental Expertise of the Spanish Atlantic’, History of Science, 55 (2017): 234–252, doi:10.1177/0073275317706041.
  • Cantón Álvarez, J. A., ‘Globalisation Interrupted? The Case of Opium in the Circulation of Medical Knowledge in Ming Dynasty China’, Journal of the Economic & Social History of the Orient, 60 (2017): 524–548, doi:10.1163/15685209-12341429.
  • Caracausi, A., ‘Information Asymmetries and Craft Guilds in Pre-Modern Markets: Evidence From Italian Proto-Industry’, Economic History Review, 70 (2017): 397–422, doi:10.1111/ehr.12380.
  • Cayley, S., ‘Digitization for the Masses: Taking Users beyond Simple Searching in Nineteenth-Century Collections Online’, Journal of Victorian Culture, 22 (2017): 248–255, doi:10.1080/13555502.2017.1301180.
  • Ceserani, G., et al., ‘British Travelers in Eighteenth-Century Italy: The Grand Tour and the Profession of Architecture’, American Historical Review, 122 (2017): 425–450, doi:10.1093/ahr/122.2.425.
  • Charnock, H., ‘“A Million Little Bonds’: Infidelity, Divorce and the Emotional Worlds of Marriage in British Women's Magazines of the 1930s’, Cultural and Social History, 14 (2017): 363–379, doi:10.1080/14780038.2017.1314578.
  • Clay, C., ‘“The Modern Weekly for the Modern Woman”: Time and Tide, Feminism and Interwar Print Culture’, Women: A Cultural Review, 27 (2016): 397–411, doi:10.1080/09574042.2017.1301120.
  • Cohn, J., ‘Data, Power, and Conservation: The Early Turn to Information Technologies to Manage Energy Resources’, Information & Culture, 52 (2017): 334–361, doi:10.7560/IC52303.
  • Colpitts, G., ‘Knowing Nature in the Business Records of the Hudson's Bay Company, 1670–1840’, Business History, 59 (2017): 1054–1080, doi:10.1080/00076791.2017.1304914.
  • Connor, J. T. H., ‘“One Simply Doesn't Arbitrate Authorship of Thoughts”: Socialized Medicine, Medical Mccarthyism, and the Publishing of Rural Health And Medical Care (1948)’, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 72 (2017): 245–271, doi:10.1093/jhmas/jrx004.
  • Cook, M., ‘“Archives of Feeling’: The AIDS Crisis in Britain 1987’, History Workshop Journal, 83 (2017): 51–78, doi:10.1093/hwj/dbx001.
  • De Vos, P., ‘Methodological Challenges Involved in Compiling the Nahua Pharmacopeia’, History of Science, 55 (2017): 210–233, doi:10.1177/0073275317712139.
  • Drucker, D. J., ‘How Subjects Matter: The Kinsey Institute's Sexual Nomenclature: A Thesaurus (1976)’, Information & Culture, 52 (2017): 207–228, doi:10.7560/IC52204.
  • Eddy, M. D., ‘The Interactive Notebook: How Students Learned to Keep Notes during the Scottish Enlightenment’, Book History, 19 (2016): 86–131, doi:10.1353/bh.2016.0002. Analyses the history, manipulation, and circulation of student notebooks during the Scottish Enlightenment.
  • Edelstein, D., et al., ‘Historical Research in a Digital Age: Reflections from the Mapping the Republic of Letters Project’, American Historical Review, 122 (2017): 400–424, doi:10.1093/ahr/122.2.400.
  • Egginton, H., ‘In Quest of the Antique: The Bazaar, Exchange and Mart and the Democratization of Collecting, 1926–42’, Twentieth Century British History, 28 (2017): 159–185, doi:10.1093/tcbh/hww050.
  • Ferretti, F., ‘Publishing Anarchism: Pyotr Kropotkin and British Print Cultures, 1876–1917’, Journal of Historical Geography, 57 (2017): 17–27, doi:10.1016/j.jhg.2017.04.006.
  • Glaisyer, N., ‘“The Most Universal Intelligencers”: The Circulation of the London Gazette in the 1690s’, Media History, 23 (2017): 256–280, doi:10.1080/13688804.2017.1309971.
  • Green, B., ‘The Feel of the Feminist Network: Votes for Women After The Suffragette’, Women: A Cultural Review, 27 (2016): 359–377, doi:10.1080/09574042.2017.1301123.
  • Green, S., ‘Inclusions and Exclusions: Considerations for a Stopes Digital Collection’, Women's History Review, 26 (2017): 721–737, doi:10.1080/09612025.2016.1166884.
  • Hajek, A., ‘Women's Studies 2.0. Italian Feminist Scholarship in the Digital Age’, Women's History Review, 26 (2017): 692–704, doi:10.1080/09612025.2016.1166885.
  • Hartrich, E., ‘Charters and Inter-Urban Networks: England, 1439–1449’, English Historical Review, 132 (2017): 219–249, doi:10.1093/ehr/cex136.
  • Highland, K. D., ‘In the Bookstore: The Houses of Appleton and Book Cultures in Antebellum New York City’, Book History, 19 (2016): 214–255, doi:10.1353/bh.2016.0006.
  • Isaac, J., ‘Graphing the Archives of Nineteenth-Century Amateur Newspapers’, Cultural and Social History, 19 (2016): 317–348, doi:10.1353/bh.2016.0009.
  • Jamison, A., ‘Women's Literary History in Ireland: Digitizing The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing’, Women's History Review, 26 (2017): 751–765, doi:10.1080/09612025.2016.1166886.
  • Johnson, N. R., ‘Rhetoric and the Cold War Politics of Information Science’, Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 68 (2017): 1375–1384, doi:10.1002/asi.23866.
  • Kelly, J. M., ‘Reading the Grand Tour at a Distance: Archives and Datasets in Digital History’, American Historical Review, 122 (2017): 451–463, doi:10.1093/ahr/122.2.451.
  • Kent, H., ‘Wearing Black, Wearing Bows: Union Women and the Politics of Dress in the US Fashion Press, 1861–1865’, Women: A Cultural Review, 26 (2017): 555–567, doi:10.1080/09612025.2016.1148504.
  • Krätli, G., ‘Between Quandary and Squander: A Brief and Biased Inquiry into the Preservation of West African Arabic Manuscripts: The State of the Discipline’, Cultural and Social History, 19 (2016): 399–431, doi:10.1353/bh.2016.0012.
  • Lanzolla, G., and A. Giudici, ‘Pioneering Strategies in the Digital World: Insights from the Axel Springer Case’, Business History, 59 (2017): 744–777, doi:10.1080/00076791.2016.1269752.
  • Liddle, D., ‘The News Machine: Textual Form and Information Function in the London Times, 1785–1885’, Book History, 19 (2016): 132–168, doi:10.1353/bh.2016.0003.
  • McCallum, J., ‘U.S. Censorship, Violence, and Moral Judgement in a Wartime Democracy, 1941–1945’, Diplomatic History, 41 (2017): 439–459, doi:10.1093/dh/dhw058.
  • McKittrick, M., ‘Making Rain, Making Maps: Competing Geographies of Water and Power in Southwestern Africa’, Journal of African History, 58 (2017): 182–212, doi:10.1017/S0021853717000032. Analyses how geographical knowledge was produced and how African ideas about geography were included in European maps.
  • McShane, A., ‘Digital Broadsides: The Upsides and the Downsides’, Media History, 23 (2017): 281–302, doi:10.1080/13688804.2017.1307099.
  • Millstone, N., ‘Designed for Collection: Early Modern News and the Production of History’, Media History, 23 (2017): 177–198, doi:10.1080/13688804.2017.1302323.
  • Mirowski, P., and E. Nik-Khah, The Knowledge We Have Lost in Information: The History of Information in Modern Economics (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).
  • Navickas, K., and A. Crymble, ‘From Chartist Newspaper to Digital Map of Grassroots Meetings, 1841–44: Documenting Workflows’, Journal of Victorian Culture, 22 (2017): 232–247, doi:10.1080/13555502.2017.1301179.
  • Nevitt, M., ‘Books in the News in Cromwellian England’, Media History, 23 (2017): 218–240, doi:10.1080/13688804.2016.1270750.
  • Nikolaou, P., ‘Authoring the Ancient Sites of Cyprus in the Late Nineteenth Century: The British Museum Excavation Notebooks, 1893–1896’, Journal of Historical Geography, 57 (2017): 83–100, doi:10.1016/j.jhg.2017.02.006.
  • Ofer, I., ‘Teresa, ¿Revista para todas las mujeres? Género, clase y espacios de la vida cotidiana en el discurso de la sección femenina (1960–1970)’, Historía y Política, 37 (2017): 121–146, doi:10.18042/hp.37.05. Analyses how Teresa, the official magazine for Falangist women between 1954 and 1977, described and shaped the role of women in both domestic and professional contexts.
  • Peacey, J., ‘European News Culture During the English Revolution: Nouvelles Ordinaires de Londres (1650–1660)’, Media History, 23 (2017): 241–255, doi: 13688804.2016.1270749.
  • Pederson, S., The Scottish Suffragettes and the Press (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017).
  • Penman, L. T. I., ‘Omnium Exposita Rapinæ: The Afterlives of the Papers of Samuel Hartlib’, Book History, 19 (2016): 1–65, doi:10.1353/bh.2016.0000.
  • Peters, E., Commemoration and Oblivion in Royalist Print Culture, 1658–1667 (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017).
  • Piper, A., ‘Book Thieves: Theft and Literary Culture in Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century Australia’, Cultural and Social History, 14 (2017): 257–273, doi:10.1080/14780038.2016.1237447.
  • Post, C., ‘Preservation Practices of New Media Artists: Challenges, Strategies, and Attitudes in the Personal Management of Artworks’, Journal of Documentation, 73 (2017): 716–732, doi:10.1108/JD-09-2016-0116.
  • Raymond, J., ‘Everything in its Right Place’, Media History, 23 (2017): 303–309, doi:10.1080/13688804.2016.1270748. Analyses the articles in an issue of Media History focusing on early modern news history and the digitisation and organization of digital news archives.
  • Robbins, K., ed., The History of Oxford University Press. Volume IV, 1970–2004 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).
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