In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Notes on Contributors

Leah Orr is a doctoral candidate in English at the Pennsylvania State University. Her work is published or forthcoming in Studies in Philology and Classical and Modern Literature, and she is currently writing a dissertation on early eighteenth-century fiction and its print culture contexts.

Gabriel Egan is the author of The Struggle for Shakespeare’s Text: Twentieth-Century Editorial Theory and Practice (2010), Green Shakespeare: From Ecopolitics to Ecocriticism (2006), and Shakespeare and Marx (2004). He co-edits the journals Theatre Notebook and Shakespeare.

Valerie Rumbold is Reader in the Department of English at the University of Birmingham. She is the author of Women’s Place in Pope’s World (1989) and editor of the Longman Annotated Alexander Pope: The Dunciad in Four Books (1999) and of volume III of the Longman Annotated The Poems of Alexander Pope (2007). She is also editor of volume II of the Cambridge Works of Jonathan Swift, scheduled for publication in 2012.

Winfried Rudolf is Professor of English Philology and Medieval Literature at the University of Göttingen. His research focuses on late Anglo-Saxon manuscripts and the textual instability of Old English liturgical texts, on medieval semiotics, childhood, Middle English metrical interfaces, and the transition from manuscript to print. He is currently working on an electronic web-based textcorpus of Old English anonymous homilies.

Reviewers

Dr Meraud Ferguson Hand spent eight years as a bibliographer for the Oxford English Dictionary project at Oxford University Press, but now divides her time between writing, research, and looking after toddler twins.

Renae Satterley is Rare Books Librarian at Middle Temple Library, London.

Dennis E. Rhodes retired as Deputy Keeper of Printed Books at the British Library in 1985 and continues his researches mainly on Italian bibliography.

Brian J. McMullin, formerly Reader in Librarianship, is now an Honorary Research Associate in the Centre for the Book, Monash University, Melbourne.

Natalie Aldred is an independent researcher; she is currently investigating early advertisements. [End Page 451]

Raika Woköck, co-editor of the ARLIS News-Sheet and former Rare Books Reference Specialist at the British Library, holds an MA in art history of the University of Würzburg, Germany, and is currently undertaking an MA in Library and Information studies at the University of Aberystwyth.

Mark Spencer is Associate Professor of History at Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario.

Mirjam M. Foot, former Director of Collections and Preservation at the British Library, is Emeritus Professor of Library and Archive Studies at University College, London.

David Pearson is Director of Libraries, Archives, and the Guildhall Art Gallery in the City of London; he is currently President of the Bibliographical Society and has written extensively on the history of bookbinding, and private libraries.

...

pdf

Share