New worlds for learning, 1873-1972

Bibliographic Information

New worlds for learning, 1873-1972

David McKitterick

(A history of Cambridge University Press, v. 3)

Cambridge University Press, 2004

  • : hbk

Available at  / 8 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 429-489) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This volume completes the history of Cambridge University Press from the sixteenth century to the late twentieth. It examines the ways by which the Press launched itself as a London publisher in the 1870s, building up its educational and academic lists. It charts how interests in America were advanced, how subjects were extended and the Press became an international organisation with authors and customers across the world, while at the same time developing both its printing and its publishing. The volume explores changes in the printing industry, showing how the Press assumed a leading part in the typographical renaissance of the 1920s and 1930s, and built on this after the Second World War to acquire an international reputation for the quality of its work. In publishing as in printing, this book analyses both the pitfalls and the successes in a century of change.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • 1. A century of change
  • 2. 1873
  • 3. Macmillan
  • 4. Growth in publishing, 1870-1900
  • 5. The late nineteenth-century Printing House
  • 6. Markets across the world
  • 7. 1900-1916: a difficult period
  • 8. The Encyclopaedia Britannica
  • 9. 1916-1923: fresh beginnings
  • 10. Bibles, 1916-1923
  • 11. Walter Lewis and the typographical renaissance
  • 12. The Roberts years
  • 13. America
  • 14. Kingsford and recovery
  • 15. The American branch
  • 16. Printing, 1946-1963
  • 17. A developing crisis
  • 18. On the brink.

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