Communism's print culture
In: Twentieth century communism: a journal of international history, Band 12, Heft 12, S. 5-14
ISSN: 1758-6437
In: Twentieth century communism: a journal of international history, Band 12, Heft 12, S. 5-14
ISSN: 1758-6437
In: Studies in Book and Print Culture
In: Parliamentary history, Band 26, Heft 1, S. 1-16
ISSN: 1750-0206
In: History of the book no. 11
1. "The workingman's bible" and the making of American socialism -- 2. Charles H. Kerr & Company and the Americanization of Marxian socialism -- 3. Activist readers and American socialists' print culture of dissent -- 4. How the Socialist Party created a print culture of dissent without a party-owned press -- 5. Information management and the Socialist Party's Information Department and Research Bureau -- 6. Annotations on the failure of socialism in America -- 7. Conclusion : what a book cannot do.
Intersection between oral tradition, manuscript, and print cultures in Charlotte Brooke's Reliques of Irish poetry (1789) / Lesa Ní Mhunghaile -- Garbling and jumbling : printing from dictation in eighteenth-century Limerick / Andrew Carpenter -- Lost in translation : reading Keating's Foras feasa ar Éireann, 1635-1847 / Marc Caball -- "And this deponent further sayeth" : orality, print and the 1641 depositions / Marie-Louise Coolahan -- Gaelic texts and English script / Nicholas Williams -- "James Cleland his book" : the library of a small farming family in early nineteenth-century Co. Down / John Moulden -- Reading and orality in early nineteenth-century Ulster poetry : James Orr and his contemporaries / Linde Lunney
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- CHAPTER 1. No News Is Good News -- CHAPTER 2. The Black and White Veil -- CHAPTER 3. Living Language -- CHAPTER 4. Measured Revolution -- CHAPTER 5. Enlightenment Beyond Reason -- CHAPTER 6. Free Love, Free Print -- Conclusion -- Conclusion -- Works Cited -- Index
In: Studies in Print Culture and the History of the Book
Front Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part I: A City and its Library -- "Now We Are a City": Portrait of a Boomtown -- 2. "A Magnificent Array of Books": The Origins and Development of the Muncie Public Library -- 3. Cosmopolitan Trends: Print Culture and the Public Library in 1890s Muncie -- Part II: Reading Experiences -- 4. Borrowing Patterns: The Muncie Public Library and its Patrons -- 5. "Bread Sweet as Honey": Reading, Education, and the Public Library
In: Theater of State, S. 146-174
In: African Gender Studies A Reader, S. 279-295
In: Studies in legal history
In: Studies in legal history
The typographical tribunal -- Precarious evidence : Sojourner Truth and the Matthias scandal -- Eyewitness to the cruelty : Frederick Douglass's 1845 narrative -- Talking lawyerlike about law : black advocacy and my bondage and my freedom -- Representing the slave : white advocacy and black testimony in Harriet Beecher Stowe's Dred -- The South's countersuit : William Maccreary Burwell's White acre vs. Black acre
In: Twentieth century communism: a journal of international history, Band 12, Heft 12, S. 37-61
ISSN: 1758-6437
In: Forster , L C 2016 , ' Spreading the word : feminist print cultures and the women's liberation movement ' Women's History Review , vol 25 , no. 5 , pp. 812-831 . DOI:10.1080/09612025.2015.1132878
This article investigates the significance of print cultures to women of the second wave of feminism. It takes a broad view of a male-dominated publishing industry and highlights the various ways that women intervened and responded through their writing, publishing and organisational skills and political commitment. It discusses the shifts in female publishing cultures, emboldened by the overarching Women's Liberation Movement and empowered through the establishment of separatist networks. Feminist activism, I argue, may be discerned in the impetus behind the construction and publication of feminist magazines. The last section considers the different publishing hinterlands of three feminist magazines, overlapping in their concerns, but distinctive in their approaches: Shrew, Spare Rib and Womens Voice, and argues that such magazines of the second wave represent the diversity and print activism of the WLM.
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