Title:
American Publishers of Indecent Books, 1840-1890

dc.contributor.advisor Tone, Anea
dc.contributor.author Hawley, Elizabeth Haven en_US
dc.contributor.committeeMember August Giebelhaus
dc.contributor.committeeMember Greg Nobles
dc.contributor.committeeMember Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz
dc.contributor.committeeMember Usselman, Steven
dc.contributor.department History, Technology and Society en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2006-01-18T22:25:44Z
dc.date.available 2006-01-18T22:25:44Z
dc.date.issued 2005-11-28 en_US
dc.description.abstract American publishers of indecent books from 1840 to 1890 were not outsiders to the printing trades. They should be seen instead as entrepreneurs whose technological practices and business strategies were largely representative of the diversity within American publishing. Books prohibited or later destroyed because of their content survived in a relatively wide variety of forms in the hands of rare book collectors, making such artifacts perhaps even more important for the study of industrial practices than literary works collected in greater numbers by research institutions. Those rare artifacts make available long-lost details about the men and women who manufactured print at the boundaries of social propriety, the production technologies they employed, and the place of difficult-to-research publishers in the American book trades. Conservation, papermaking, illustrations, printing, and typefounding are as important to the history of American erotica as the more famous prosecutions led by Anthony Comstock. Focusing on works considered indecent by the nineteenth-century bibliographer Henry Spencer Ashbee, this dissertation integrates the political economy of print with an analysis of the material forms of semi-erotic and obscene books. Surviving artifacts offer evidence about regional production styles and the ways that fiber selection, and particularly the use of straw in low-quality papers, influenced the prevalence of yellow wrappers for ephemeral works. Printer skill levels and capitalization can sometimes be determined through the presence of gripper marks on printed sheets. Reconstructing and contextualizing the technological practices of these publishers can create new tools for bibliographical analysis, an accessible source of information about technical processes for general historians, and a wealth of data about publishers such as William Berry, whose role in networks of erotica in nineteenth-century America has only recently begun to be appreciated. en_US
dc.description.degree Ph.D. en_US
dc.format.extent 10946837 bytes
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/1853/7579
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.publisher Georgia Institute of Technology en_US
dc.subject Straw paper en_US
dc.subject Grippers
dc.subject Print culture
dc.subject Nineteenth century
dc.subject 19th
dc.subject Antebellum
dc.subject American publishing
dc.subject Printing history
dc.subject History of technology
dc.subject Erotica
dc.subject Book history
dc.title American Publishers of Indecent Books, 1840-1890 en_US
dc.type Text
dc.type.genre Dissertation
dspace.entity.type Publication
local.contributor.corporatename School of History and Sociology
local.contributor.corporatename Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication 4a394044-f889-462e-bd25-ffd14ad5e9f3
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication b1049ff1-5166-442c-9e14-ad804b064e38
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