Jeffrey M. Makala is Associate Director for Special Collections and University Archivist at Furman University. He is the coeditor of In Dogs We Trust: An Anthology of American Dog Literature.
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Description
List of Illustrations Acknowledgements Introduction 1. The Development and Spread of Stereotyping in Europe and North America 2. Mathew Carey and the Family Bible Marketplace 3. The American Bible Society and the Possibilities of Large-Scale Printing 4. Material Texts: Trade Sales, Reprinting, and the Book Trades 5. Stereotyping in Language, Literature, and Material Culture Epilogue: Abraham Hart and Nineteenth-Century Changes in the Printing Trades Appendix A: First Uses of Stereotype Plates in the United States, by Date and Location Appendix B: "Directions for Repairing Plates," ca. 1820 Notes Bibliography Index
"An important, interesting, and thorough contribution to our knowledge of stereotyping and electrotyping and the history of their industrial implementation and economic impact in America. Publishing Plates contains extensive references to original sources, comprehensive narrative histories of the Carey company and the American Bible Society, and fascinating anecdotes that flesh out the importance of stereotyping and electrotyping." -Peter Shillingsburg,author of Textuality and Knowledge: Essays