Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-29T12:55:14.024Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

3 - The book as a commodity

from PART II - ECONOMIC, LEGAL AND CULTURAL CONTEXTS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 September 2010

Michael F. Suarez, SJ
Affiliation:
University of Virginia
Michael L. Turner
Affiliation:
Bodleian Library, Oxford
Get access

Summary

Print and consumption

Commercial ingenuity dominates the history of printing and publishing in Britain in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, and in many ways booksellers – but also authors and readers – came to treat the various products of the printing press more as market commodities, more as goods directed to specific audiences. Such promotional developments must be evaluated, however, against a continuing production regime characterized by the extreme variability of the size and price of the printed text, by multiple but modestly sized reprintings of successful titles (instead of ambitious single print runs), and by the manufacture of many non-commercial books (in the sense that full costs were not always recovered from sale). Above all, the price of new and reprinted books was modulated for much of the period by the effective cartelization of the trade in which booksellers’ protection of reprinting rights maintained monopoly prices in England (although not in Ireland and only ineffectively in Scotland, where booksellers led the challenge against English claims to perpetual copyright). With increasing effect before the momentous legal challenges of the 1770s (but also residually thereafter), leading bookseller-publishers maintained prices, and hence the primary determinant of access to new literature, by the successful assertion of their property rights.

Book ‘commodification’ certainly did not automatically mean cheap print. Much popular literature was reduced in price by the mass production and reprinting of books and magazines in the late eighteenth century, and even more notably after the advent of steam-powered printing in the early nineteenth century, but many bookseller-publishers continued to prosper under the protection of jealously guarded reproduction monopolies (even if many of them were now technically legally unenforceable). Other consumer goods besides books and print were, of course, eagerly taxed by government but none, before at least 1774, were so subject to state-protected price fixing. This, it has been argued, even encouraged the rationing of supply to the market. In effect, such practices positioned books as both consumer and luxury goods; many books promoted as typical products of the eighteenth-century consumer revolution were grossly overpriced. Many publications, reliant not just on literary content but on design and modishness, also created great fortunes for the most successful of their commercial producers. The other, most obvious feature of this publishing regime was that those who might be deemed the original manufacturers, the authors, largely failed to benefit from the market boom.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

ÓCiosàin, N. 1997 Print and popular culture in Ireland, 1750–1850, Basingstoke.
Albert, W. 1972 The turnpike road system in England, 1663–1840, London.
Alden, J. 1952Pills and publishing: some notes on the English book trade’, Library, 5th ser., 7.
Anderson, B. L. 1969Provincial aspects of the financial revolution in the eighteenth century’, Business History, 11, 2.Google Scholar
Anderson, B. L. 1970Money and the structure of credit in the eighteenth century’, Business History, 12, 2.Google Scholar
Ball, J. 1973 William Caslon, 1693–1766: the ancestry, life and connections of England’s foremost letter-engraver and type-founder, Kineton.
Barber, G. G. 1976Books from the Old World and for the New: the British international trade in books in the eighteenth century’, Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 151.Google Scholar
Barber, G. G. 1982Book imports and exports in the eighteenth century’, in , Myers Harris 1982.
Barker, N. J. 1994William Strahan and Laurence Sterne’, in Brack 1994.Google Scholar
Barnes, J. J. 1983Depression and innovation in the British and American book trade, 1819–1939’, in Carpenter 1983.Google Scholar
Belanger, T. 1975Booksellers’ trade sales, 1718–1768’, Library, 5th ser., 30.Google Scholar
Bellamy, L. 1998 Commerce, morality and the eighteenth-century novel, Cambridge.
Blagden, C. 1951Booksellers’ trade sales, 1718–1768’, Library, 5th ser., 5.Google Scholar
Blakey, D. B. 1939 The Minerva Press, 1790–1820, London.
Borsay, P. 1977The English urban renaissance: the development of a provincial urban culture c.1680–c.1760’, Social History, 2.Google Scholar
Borsay, P. and McInnes, A. 1990Debate: leisure town or urban renaissance?’, P&P, 126.Google Scholar
Brewer, J. 1995“The most polite age and the most vicious”: attitudes towards culture as a commodity, 1660–1880’, in Bermingham and Brewer 1995 –61.
Bruntjen, S. H. A. 1985 John Boydell, 1719–1804: a study of art patronage and publishing in Georgian London, New York.
Cameron, W. J. 1975John Bell (1745–1831): a case study of the use of advertisement lists as evidence in publishing history’, The Humanities Association Review, 26, 3.Google Scholar
Christianson, C. P. 1999The rise of London’s book-trade’, in II Morgan, N. and Thomson, R.M. (eds.) The Cambridge history of the book in Britain, vol. II: 1100–1400, Cambridge, 2008 IV.Google Scholar
Clayton, T. 1997 The English print, 1688–1902, New Haven.
Collet, C. D. 1899 History of the taxes on knowledge: their origin and repeal, 2 vols., London.
Corfield, P. J. 1982 The impact of English towns, 1700–1800, Oxford.
Cranfield, G. A. 1962 The development of the provincial newspaper, 1700–1760, Oxford.
Earle, P. 1989 The making of the English middle class: business, society and family life in London, 1660–1730, London.
Eliot, S. 1994 Some patterns and trends in British publishing, 1800–1919, London.
Feinstein, C. H. 1981Capital accumulation and the Industrial Revolution’, in Floud and McCloskey 1981 –42.
Fergus, J. 1984Eighteenth-century readers in provincial England: the customers of Samuel Clay’s circulating library and bookshop in Warwick 1771–72’, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 78.Google Scholar
Fergus, J. 1991 Jane Austen: a literary life, Basingstoke.
Fergus, J. 1996Provincial servants’ reading in the late eighteenth century’, in Raven, Small and Tadmor 1996 –25.
Fergus, J. and Portner, R. 1987Provincial bookselling in eighteenth-century England: the case of John Clay reconsidered’, Studies in Bibliography, 40.Google Scholar
Finkelstein, D. 2002 The house of Blackwood: author–publisher relations in the Victorian era, University Park, Public Advertiser.
Gallaway, F. W. 1940The conservative attitude towards fiction, 1770–1830’, Publications of the Modern Language Associate of America, 55.Google Scholar
Garside, P. 2000The English novel in the romantic era: consolidation and dispersal’, in Garside, Raven and Schöwerling 2000, II.
Gaskell, P. 1972 A new introduction to bibliography, Oxford.
Goldsmith, O. 1762 The citizen of the world; or letters from a Chinese philosopher, residing in London, to his friends in the east, London.
Green, I. and Peters, K. 2002Religious publishing in England, 1640–1695’, in II Morgan, N. and Thomson, R.M. (eds.) The Cambridge history of the book in Britain, vol. II: 1100–1400, Cambridge, 2008 IV.Google Scholar
Hanson, L. W. 1963 Contemporary sources for British and Irish economic history, 1701–1750, Cambridge.
Harris, M. 1978aThe management of the London newspaper press during the eighteenth century’, Publishing History, 4.Google Scholar
Harris, M. 1987 London newspapers in the age of Walpole: a study of the origins of the modern English press, Rutherford, NJ.
Harris, M. 1997Scratching the surface: engravers, printsellers and the London book trade in the mideighteenth century’, in Hunt, Mandelbrote and Shell 1997.
Hernlund, P. 1967William Strahan’s ledgers: standard charges for printing, 1738–1785’, Studies in Bibliography, 20.Google Scholar
Higgs, H. 1935 Bibliography of economics, 1751–1775, Cambridge.
Isaac, P. C. G., and McKay, B. (eds.) 1997 Images and texts: their production and distribution in the 18th and 19th centuries, Print Networks, Winchester.
Jones, E. L. 1973Fashion manipulators: consumer tastes and British industries, 1660–1800’, in Cain and Uselding 1973.
Knight, C. 1854 The old printer and the modern press, London.
Korshin, P. J. (ed.) 1976 The widening circle: essays on the circulation of literature in eighteenth-century Europe, Philadelphia, PA.
Langford, P. 1989 A polite and commercial people: England, 1727–1783, Oxford.
Lippincott, L. 1983 Selling art in Georgian London: the rise of Arthur Pond, New Haven, CT.
Mandelbrote, G. 1997Richard Bentley’s copies: the ownership of copyrights in the late 17th century’, in Hunt, Mandelbrote and Shell 1997.
Mathias, P. 1969 The first industrial nation: an economic history of Britain, 1700–1914, London.
Mathias, P. 1979 The transformation of England: essays in the economic and social history of England in the eighteenth century, London.
Maxted, I. 1977 The London book trades, 1775–1800: a preliminary checklist of members, Folkestone.
McInnes, A. 1988The emergence of a leisure town: Shrewsbury, 1660–1760’, P&P, 120.Google Scholar
McKendrick, N. 1982Commercialization and the economy’, in McKendrick, Brewer and Plumb 1982.
Mitchell, B. R., and Deane, P. 1962 Abstract of British historical statistics, Cambridge.
Monkman, K. 1970The bibliography of the early editions of Tristram Shandy’, Library, 5th ser., 25.Google Scholar
Munter, R. 1967 The history of the Irish newspaper, 1685–1760, London.
Myers, R. 1982Sale by auction: the rise of auctioneering exemplified’, in Myers and Harris 1982 –63.
Myers, R. (ed.) 2001 The Stationers’ Company: a history of the later years, 1800–2000, London.
Myers, R. and Harris, M. (eds.) 1982 Sale and distribution of books from 1700, Oxford.
Myers, R., Harris, M. and Mandelbrote, G. (eds.) 2001 Under the hammer: book auctions since the seventeenth century, New Castle, DE.
Nichols, J. 18121816 Literary anecdotes of the eighteenth century, 9 vols., London.
Noblett, W. 1972John Newbery, publisher extraordinary’, History Today, 22.Google Scholar
O’Brien, K. 2001The history market in eighteenth-century England’, in Rivers 2001 –34.
Paterson, S. 1772 Joineriana: or the book of scraps, 2 vols., London.
Paulson, R. 1995Emulative consumption and literacy: the Harlot, Moll Flanders, and Mrs Slipslop’, in Bermingham and Brewer 1995.
Pearson, J. 1999 Women’s reading in Britain, 1750–1835: a dangerous recreation, Cambridge.
Pollard, H. G., and Ehrman, A. 1965 The distribution of books by catalogue from the invention of printing to AD 1800, Cambridge.
Pollard, M. 1989 Dublin’s trade in books, 1500–1800, Oxford.
Potter, E. 1997The changing role of the trade bookbinder, 1800–1900’, in Hunt, Mandelbrote and Shell 1997 –74.
Raven, J. 1990The Noble brothers and popular publishing, 1737–89’, Library, 6th ser., 12.Google Scholar
Raven, J. 1992 Judging new wealth: popular publishing and responses to commerce in England, 1750–1800, Oxford.
Raven, J. 1994Selling one’s life: James Lackington, eighteenth-century booksellers and the design of autobiography’, in Brack 1994.
Raven, J. 1997a ‘Establishing and maintaining credit lines overseas: the case of the export book trade from London in the eighteenth century, mechanism and personnel’ in Fontaine et al. 1997 –61.
Raven, J. 1997b ‘The export of books to colonial north America’, Publishing History, 42.Google Scholar
Raven, J. 1998New reading histories, print culture, and the identification of change: the case of eighteenth-century England’, Social History, 23.Google Scholar
Raven, J. 2000a ‘Historical introduction: the novel comes of age’, in Garside, Raven and Schöwerling 2000, I.
Raven, J. 2000b ‘The importation of books in the eighteenth century’, in Amory and Hall 2000 –97.
Raven, J. 2001a ‘The book trades’, in Rivers 2001.
Raven, J. 2001b ‘British publishing and bookselling: constraints and developments’, in Michon and Mollier 2000.
Raven, J. 2002b London booksellers and American customers: transatlantic literary community and the Charleston library society, 1748–1811, Columbia, SC.
Raven, J. 2007 The business of books: booksellers and the English book trade, 1450–1850, New Haven and London.
Rees, E. Rees, T. and Britton, J. 1896 Reminiscences of literary London from 1779 to 1853, London.
Roscoe, S. 1973 John Newbery and his successors, 1740–1814: a bibliography, Wormley.
Rose, C. 1993The origins and ideals of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1699–1716’, in Walsh, Haydon and Taylor 1993 –90.
Saunders, J. W. 1964 (1904) The profession of English letters, London.
Schofield, R. S. 1973Dimensions of illiteracy, 1750–1850’, Explorations in Economic History, 10.Google Scholar
Snyder, H. L. 1968The circulation of newspapers in the reign of Queen Anne’, Library, 5th ser., 23.Google Scholar
Snyder, H. L. and Smith, M. S. 1976A further note’, Library, 5th ser., 31.Google Scholar
St Clair, W. 2004 The reading nation in the romantic period, Cambridge.
Stuart, D. 1838The late Mr Coleridge, poet’, Gentleman’s Magazine, n.s., 10.Google Scholar
Suarez, M. F., 1999a ‘English book sale catalogues as bibliographical evidence: methodological considerations illustrated by a case study in the provenance and distribution of Dodsley’s Collection of poems, 1750–1795’, Library, 6th ser., 21.Google Scholar
Sutherland, J. A. 1987The British book trade and the crash of 1826’, Library, 6th ser., 9.Google Scholar
Sweet, R. 1999 The English town, 1680–1840: government, society and culture, Harlow.
Taylor, J. T. 1943 Early opposition to the English novel: the popular reaction from 1760 to 1830, New York.
Tierney, J. E. 1995Book advertisements in mid-18th-century newspapers: the example of Robert Dodsley’, in Myers and Harris 1995 –22.
Timperley, C. H. 1842 Encyclopaedia of literary and typographical anecdote, 2nd edn, London.
Walsh, M. 2001Literary scholarship and the life of editing’, in Rivers 2001.
Walters, G. 1974The booksellers in 1759 and 1774: the battle for literary property’, Library, 5th ser., 29.Google Scholar
Weedon, A. 2003 Victorian publishing: the economics of book production for a mass market, 1836–1916, Aldershot.
Welsh, C. 1885 A bookseller of the last century: being some account of the life of John Newbery, and of the books he published, with a notice of the later Newberys, London.
Werkmeister, L. 1963 The London daily press, 1772–1792, Lincoln, NE.
Wiles, R. M. 1957 Serial publication in England before 1750, Cambridge.
Wiles, R. M. 1965 Freshest advices: early provincial newspapers in England, Columbus, OH.
Wrigley, E. A. and Schofield, R. S. 1981 The population history of England, 1541–1871: a reconstruction, Cambridge, MA; 2nd edn 1989.
Zachs, W. 1998 The first John Murray and the late eighteenth-century London book trade, Oxford.

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×