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Bibliographical History As a Field of
Study
by
G. Thomas
Tanselle
The history of scholarship has long been a recognized subject of inquiry in certain disciplines. One thinks immediately of J. E. Sandys's A History of Classical Scholarship (1903-8), Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff's Geschichte der Philologie (1921), and Rudolf Pfeiffer's History of Classical Scholarship (1968-76) and of the considerable body of other work in this area.[1] Scholarship is of course a cultural activity, and the historical study of it forms a natural part of the intellectual history of any period or country. In practice, however, it is sometimes neglected in such histories, perhaps out of a feeling that it is derivative, not primary. But a distinction between creative work and scholarship cannot be maintained, for every effort to establish past events—however disciplined by what are taken to be responsible ways of handling evidence—is a creative act, involving judgments at each step. The same observation applies to the attempt at distinguishing criticism from creative work (and from scholarship). Literary critics (who are not necessarily concerned with history) have occasionally argued that their own writings are on a par with the literature they are ostensibly discussing. Surely, however, the worth of a piece depends on individual performance, not genre: some scholarly or critical essays are indeed more valuable and inspiring than some poems. All verbal works are instances of human creativity, and any of them can reveal how individuals in the past have viewed their own world and their inheritance. I need not belabor the point: the history of scholarship is a significant branch of historical study.
Some scholarly fields have had longer histories than others, and it is natural that the younger fields are less likely than the older ones to have been the subject of extensive historical investigation. American literature, for example, did not become an accepted field of academic study until well into the twentieth century, and the history of the field has not yet been vigorously pursued.[2] An encouraging sign, however, was the establishment in 1976 of the Jay B. Hubbell Center for American Literary Historiography at Duke University, which now holds the papers of
I
The various kinds of scholarly endeavor often referred to as "bibliography" are interrelated, and the history of any one of them necessarily impinges on the history of the others. But they represent such diverse activities that they have usually been taken up separately. The history of the listing of books, insofar as it is concerned with listings by subject, is primarily a part of the history of the study of each of those subjects. Trends in such listings, however, along with general considerations of the principles underlying the listing of books, do merit consolidated historical treatment, constituting the history of what is traditionally called "enumerative bibliography" (and has also been called, appropriately, "reference bibliography").[4] Significant historical work has in fact been accomplished in this area, the best-known examples perhaps being Georg Schneider's Theory and History of Bibliography (translated by Ralph R. Shaw in 1934 from the 1926 edition of the 1923 work), Theodore Besterman's The Beginnings of Systematic Bibliography (1935; 3rd edition, in French, 1950), the books of Archer Taylor (Renaissance Guides to Books, 1945; A History of Bibliographies of Bibliographies, 1955; Book Catalogues: Their Varieties and Uses, 1957 [revised by William P. Barlow, Jr., 1986]; General Subject-Indexes since 1548, 1966),
Some lists focus more on books as physical objects than on books as conveyors of information; and although the two approaches are not always distinguished in works on bibliographical enumeration, they represent fundamentally different impulses. Even so, a single list can obviously involve both, as when the scope of a list is determined by subject matter and the form of the entries by attention to the identification of editions and impressions. One class of lists concerned principally with books as printed items, not as transmitters of texts, consists of what are often called "imprint lists" or "imprint bibliographies"—that is, lists that attempt to record all printed matter (or all in certain categories) produced within a given geographical area during a particular period of time. Even when such lists contain entries with no physical details, what underlies them is as much an interest in printing and publishing history as in the history of ideas, and those lists are thus relevant to the story of the development of analytical and descriptive bibliography. The famous Short-Title Catalogue of pre-1641 English books, though it tries to keep physical details to a minimum, is a work of physical bibliography, aiming to differentiate editions; and its history is tied up with the history of the Bibliographical Society in London, a society interested in the history of books, not in the production of lists. Similarly, the list now usually called "Goff," recording copies of incunabula in American libraries, has played a major role in the history of the publications of the Bibliographical Society of America. Thus the history of those reference works that take books (rather than works) as their concern forms a branch of bibliographical history distinct from the history of subject lists.
But it is not a branch that has been much pursued. Some such works—like the STC itself—include accounts of their own history,[7] and a few essays exist that are useful in tracing the history of these works (principally pieces by those associated with the projects, such as W. A. Jackson and Katharine F. Pantzer on the STC, and Donald Wing and Robin Alston on the short-title catalogues for 1641-1700 and 1701-1800).[8]
If the history of bibliography deals not with the history of books but with the historiography of that history, with the story of how that history has been pursued, then the history of libraries might be considered not strictly part of it. For the purchasing and the collecting of books by institutions are—like the production of books by printers and the dissemination of them by publishers and booksellers—stages in the life cycle of books, from the origin of their texts in writers' minds to the reading of those texts by persons who encounter the books. This cycle, from beginning to end (the end often enough leading to a new beginning), is the subject matter of the history of books. Nevertheless, librarians, who naturally influence the course of the history of libraries and collecting, are also scholars of the book: they are part of book history themselves, and in addition they are students of that history. Indeed, the history of all scholarship that involves the use of books is ultimately tied to the history of books (and therefore of libraries). I. R. Willison, in his lecture On the History of Libraries and Scholarship (1980), makes a similar point, observing—and welcoming—a growing recognition of "the historical interdependence of libraries and scholarship" (p. 7). John P. Feather and David McKitterick have reinforced this position in their lectures printed as The History of Books and Libraries: Two Views (1986), the former pointing out that "the history of libraries is . . . part of the larger subject of book history" (p. 14) and the latter concluding, "Far from being divorced from other parts of bibliographical study, the history of libraries is essential to it" (p. 30). It is thus fruitless to try to enforce a sharp dividing line between the history of books and the history of bibliography. But the distinction may still be useful as a framework for thought: it may help one to see, for example, that the biographical
These points about the relation of library history to bibliographical history can be duplicated for the history of the antiquarian book trade and the history of collecting by individuals—in a way that they could not be for the history of printing or typefounding or papermaking or binding. Printers, typefounders, papermakers, and binders may also happen to be scholars, but their role in the cycle of book history is connected with the physical production of books, not with receiving or responding to finished books.[16] Dealers and collectors, however—though they, too, play a role in book history—deal with the completed object; and their manner of approaching it makes them bibliographical scholars, in one degree or another, in the very process of carrying out their function in the history of a book. Publishers fall in between, controlling production but also handling completed books.[17] Biographies and autobiographies of dealers and collectors (and often of publishers) are therefore contributions at once to book history and to bibliographical history. Broader historical studies of the book trade and of collecting may of course lean in one of these directions rather than the other, but in either case they remain, by the nature of their subject, a mixture of both. One does not normally think of the historical works on bookselling or on collectors and collecting[18] as studies of bibliographical history. But the greatest broad works in this area—such as John Carter's Taste & Technique in Book-Collecting (1948) and Graham Pollard and Albert Ehrman's The Distribution of Books by Catalogue from the Invention of Printing to A.D. 1800 (1965)—can readily be regarded as making direct contributions to the history of bibliography, for the authors' own interest in the analysis of book structure and their understanding of the importance
The work that bibliographical scholars do, after all, is one of the ways in which books can be used; and those scholars can therefore be seen, along with other readers (and dealers, librarians, and collectors), as an element in the world of books. Viewed in this way, the history of bibliographical scholarship is simply one part of the history of books. How one finally decides to relate bibliographical history to book history and to delimit the activities subsumed under the two terms is less important than having a clear idea of the considerations involved. Historical studies relating to books need not be conceived of as falling into only one of these categories, but writers of them ought to have given thought to the fact that their subjects do involve the intermingling of two separate strands. Scholarship, being historical, is by nature retrospective; but it moves forward through its use of the past and is part of the stream of history. To understand that booksellers and librarians and collectors participate in this double view can only enrich our studies of them, whether we call the results contributions to the history of the reception of books or to the history of bibliographical scholarship.
I raise these points not to encourage compartmentalization but to provide a context for thinking about the history of what may be considered the central core of bibliographical study, the part dealing with physical analysis. These other areas are unquestionably parts of bibliographical activity in the broadest sense, and the investigation of the course of their growth merits strong encouragement. But I wish to concentrate here on physical bibliography, which has received far less historical attention and which is central in that all uses of books as conveyors of information presuppose some attitude toward the physicality of books as artifacts. Those who make lists of books and those who sell and buy and read books do not always think through their position on this matter, but the way in which they pursue their work does nevertheless imply a position.
Physical bibliography directly confronts the physical evidence in books, working out methods of analysis to reveal information about how books were produced and then assessing the implications of that information for classifying books (in relation to other books purporting to represent the same works) and for establishing texts (understanding how the texts in books have been affected by the means of their production). The development of this kind of analytical bibliography, and of the descriptive bibliography and textual criticism that build on it, is one of the remarkable stories in the history of twentieth-century scholarship. A relatively
When one thinks about what work of this kind already exists, one is likely to name first the volume published by the Bibliographical Society (London) on the occasion of its fiftieth anniversary—The Bibliographical Society, 1892-1942: Studies in Retrospect (1945). This excellent collection of ten essays (edited by F. C. Francis) is a particularly fitting product of the Society's jubilee, for the Society was at the heart of the new developments in bibliography in England during the first half of the twentieth century, and the volume provides the best account yet written of the bibliographical history of that period.[21] Besides an essay by F. C. Francis on the history of the Society itself and an important statement by W. W. Greg setting forth a conception of the field that reflects its then-recent history ("Bibliography—A Retrospect"), there are assessments of the work on incunabula (by Victor Scholderer), STC books (F. S. Ferguson), Shakespeare (F. P. Wilson), the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (Harold Williams and Michael Sadleir), foreign bibliography (Henry Thomas), and early bookbinding (E. P. Goldschmidt), and of bibliographical work in America (W. A. Jackson). The authors were prominent among those who had made the field what it was, and for this reason the volume is a primary document of importance to future historians; they were also scholars, and their essays display a mastery of the areas covered and a scrupulousness in forming generalizations. The work is not principally one of reminiscence but is an attempt to achieve a balanced view of the recent past, a perspective on activities in which the authors had been involved. Historians inevitably bring some predispositions to their reconstructions of the past, and first-generation historians may understandably bring more of them. Whether or not they in fact do varies from one individual to another, but personal involvement naturally plays a role. In his preface, F. C. Francis says of A. W. Pollard that "it was his genius to bring into the Society's life a personal element, a sense of common adventure, which has been one of its most valuable features and which I hope will never disappear from it" (p. vii). That "sense of common adventure" emerges repeatedly in the volume, as it does in many other writings by members of the circle—such as R. B. McKerrow's
The Studies in Retrospect volume is therefore unusual in being both primary documentation and scholarly history. As the former—and it is in fact a key document—it will obviously be of permanent use, regardless of how many other historical accounts are written. As the latter, it is worth citing here not because there is so little else to point to but because some of its essays are outstanding contributions to the history of scholarship and will remain so, no matter how excellent future treatments may prove to be. The volume offers us—as prospective historians of bibliography—a double model, encouraging us by example to write about our own immediate past in a scholarly way and demonstrating an approach to bibliographical history that is applicable to any period. The essays vary considerably in their achievement, but the most celebrated one—and rightly so—is F. P. Wilson's, entitled "Shakespeare and the 'New Bibliography.'" It is appropriate that his essay (by far the longest) should be the centerpiece of the volume, for his subject is central to the accomplishment of the Bibliographical Society in its first half-century: given the interests of Greg and McKerrow (and, through them, of Pollard), the application of physical evidence to textual problems was most extensively developed and demonstrated in connection with the Elizabethan and Jacobean dramatists, particularly Shakespeare. Wilson's essay has fortunately reached a new audience through its republication in 1970 as a separate volume with a preface by Helen Gardner, who revised the text according to notes left by Wilson and added (in bracketed footnotes) some supplementary commentary of her own. In Wilson's essay, she says in her preface, "The story of the development of Shakespearian textual studies was narrated with a range and ease of reference that sprang from massive learning so fully digested that it never clogged the coherent progress of the narrative and the argument." The essay, she went on, "had the unmistakable note of authority that profound historical scholarship gives" (p. vi). By referring both to "narrative" and to "argument," she is calling attention to what makes historical writing profound. Narratives must be shaped; and the knowledge and insight that cause one to see connections, and enable one to assess previous contributions critically, produce the argument that gives narratives their power to illuminate. Another way of making the same point is provided by her statement that Wilson's essay is both "a contribution to the history of scholarship"
Wilson's essay was in fact a history of a field—the "new" bibliography (that is, analytical bibliography applied to textual problems)—not just a history of bibliographical and textual work on Shakespeare. Since the time of his essay there has been no similar effort to cover any field, or subfield, of bibliographical study. The paucity of work forces me now to allude to two pieces of my own. I do so not to suggest that they are models of any sort (least of all in comparison with Wilson's essay) but to emphasize how little work has been done and to underscore an approach for further writing. Both are addresses delivered on retrospective occasions, one for the fiftieth anniversary of the Osler Library in 1979 and the other for the centennial of the Grolier Club in 1984.[22] In each case the subject is primarily the development of physical bibliography in the twentieth century, encompassing bibliographical analysis and its use in descriptive bibliographies and critical editions. That each of these pieces covers, at a length appropriate to an address, an area broader than Wilson's indicates the sketchiness of the treatment. Yet what I tried to show were the main lines of change and the principal issues, as they appeared to me. In dealing with author bibliography, for example, I took as central the shift from a reliance on checklists that enumerate points for identification to a greater understanding of the role of descriptive bibliography as publishing history and biography; and I made clear that in my view this shift was a welcome one, away from casualness and oversimplification and toward serious history.[23] Whether or not one agrees with my emphases or my judgments, one will find that I have offered not only a view of the past but also a way of looking at the field and evaluating its products. It is this double concern that I wish to stress, not whatever merits or flaws my own work may have. I hope that others will proceed in this fashion and that we will not have to wait long before my two addresses are supplanted by more detailed accounts.
The history of a field is to a large extent the biography of its leading figures, and biographical studies are thus an important genre within the history of scholarship. But here also there is little to point to for analytical bibliography, aside from reminiscences and memorial tributes. I do, however, wish to call attention to three essays, by Paul Needham, Fredson Bowers, and David L. Vander Meulen, that exemplify the qualities I am calling for. Needham's 1986 Hanes Lecture, The Bradshaw Method, examines Henry Bradshaw's contribution to the analysis and recording of the structure of books, reinforcing the often-expressed view that Bradshaw
Another essay that demonstrates the same point is Bowers's paper on "McKerrow's Editorial Principles for Shakespeare Reconsidered" (Shakespeare Quarterly, 6 [1955], 309-324). Although not primarily biographical, this essay analyzes McKerrow's motivations and the scholarly milieu in which his ideas were formed: "Any major work like Prolegomena," Bowers says, "has behind it a certain climate of thinking, a characteristic point of view which stems from the intellectual position held by its author" (p. 314). Bowers concludes that McKerrow's tendency to restrict the role of editorial judgment (in his Prolegomena for the Oxford Shakespeare [1939]) was a reaction against what he deemed the excessive liberties taken by nineteenth-century editors and what he saw as abuses of the New Bibliography by J. Dover Wilson. One gains from the essay both an understanding of the origins and evolution of McKerrow's ideas and a point of view regarding proper editorial procedure and its relation to analytical bibliography. The value of the piece as biography grows directly out of the extended thought Bowers had given to editorial matters.
A third exemplary piece also deals with a single important work but has a somewhat different focus: Vander Meulen's "The History and Future of Bowers's Principles" (PBSA, 79 [1985], 197-219) traces the reception of Bowers's Principles of Bibliographical Description (1949)
If I may refer again to my own work, I should like to comment on one further kind of essay that has not been much practiced. In 1986 I contributed to A Companion to Melville Studies (edited by John Bryant) an essay called "Melville and the World of Books" (pp. 781-835), which I conceived of differently from the usual survey of research. I wanted not only to pay some attention to the history of bibliographical work on Melville but, by including all kinds of research and writing that could be called bibliographical, to show the interrelatedness of all the work. The essay therefore takes up the researches on Melville's book-buying and reading and on the original and subsequent publication and reception of his writings, the efforts to record all the printings of his work and all the commentary on it, and the studies and editions aimed at establishing texts of his works. These various investigations, taken together, deal with Melville's relation to the world of handwritten and printed matter, to the segment of human experience involving the attempt to transmit verbal statements in physical form. Each of these studies contributes, in greater or lesser degree, to an understanding of the cycle that leads from the formation of Melville's ideas under the influence of other writers to the influence of his writings on later individuals who put their thoughts on paper. The never-ending process of returning to documents of the past for the stimulation that produces new insights, to be recorded in their turn in new documents, cannot be effectively studied without the point of view that analytical bibliography affords, for ideas are affected at every step of the way by the physical means of their transmission. As I said in the Melville essay, "It matters what editions, and what copies, of Shakespeare and Rabelais, of Thomas Beale and William Scoresby, Melville read, just as it matters what copies of what editions of his own writings were read by various commentators. The line connecting a copy of a book Melville read to the expropriation or adaptation of its text in one of his own works, and then from a copy of an edition of that work to the interpretation of its text by a critic who read that copy, is a direct one, if only it can be discerned" (pp. 782-783). The line can be extended further, for it obviously matters what copy of what edition of a critic's work is read by a later reader: we need to understand that "all printed
Surveys of the bibliographical scholarship in particular fields, like surveys of other kinds of scholarship, are a standard scholarly genre, and in a sense they are all examples of the study of bibliographical history. But those that are little more than lists in essay form may be regarded as bearing the same relation to historical writing that checklists bear to descriptive bibliographies. What turns a survey of previous work into a history of scholarship, however, is not so much the extent of the commentary (which is a function of the scale of the piece) but the point of view imbuing the whole. Whether one's subject is the bibliographical work of all kinds on a given topic or the bibliographical work of a single kind on all topics, one will have little insight into the subject without a background of thinking about the transmission of works made of words. Accounts of bibliographical history, like other historical writings, can be only as penetrating as the viewpoints that shape them.
II
The examples of writings on bibliographical history that I have mentioned were chosen to help delineate the contours of the field and to suggest directions for further work. Although the literature of the history of physical bibliography, as a field of scholarly inquiry, is not extensive, there are nevertheless many other writings that could be named. The bulk of them consists of retrospective pieces written by persons who were alive at the time of the events they are discussing—a situation not unexpected in a field that has had its principal development in the twentieth century. But some publications by scholars looking back to periods before their own time do exist. In any case, whatever published material there is serves to show how the field has been thought of and forms a body of literature that future historians will have to know. It may be useful at this stage to give some idea of what that literature consists of.
A natural category to begin with is the history of bibliographical societies, best represented, of course, by F. C. Francis's essay ("The Bibliographical Society: A Sketch of the First Fifty Years") in The Bibliographical Society, 1892-1942 (pp. 1-22). Two earlier accounts of the Bibliographical Society are also important (particularly the second, by
A sketch of the growth of bibliographical societies all over the world in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was provided much earlier by G. F. Barwick ("Bibliographical Societies and Bibliography," Library, 4th ser., 11 [1930-31], 151-159),[26] and at the same time Ruth S. Granniss, the long-time librarian of the Grolier Club, wrote on "What Bibliography Owes to Private Book Clubs" (PBSA, 24 [1930], 14-33).[27] As her essay suggests, any examination of the influence of organizations on the study of books as artifacts must include bibliophilic and typophilic clubs as well as bibliographical societies. The basic works, still not superseded, are, for British clubs, Abraham Hume's The Learned Societies and Printing Clubs of the United Kingdom (1847, 1853) and Harold Williams's Book Clubs & Printing Societies of Great Britain and Ireland (1929); and, for American clubs, Adolf Growoll's American Book Clubs (1897)—supplemented by Florence M. Power's "American Private Book Clubs," Bulletin of Bibliography, 20 (1950-53), 216-220, 233-236—and Lois Rather's Books and Societies (1971).[28] Many individual clubs have published their own histories, such as Clive Bigham's The Roxburghe Club (1928), Nicolas Barker's The Publications of the Roxburghe Club (1964), John T. Winterich's The Grolier Club (1950, 1967), and the collaborative volume The Grolier Club, 1884-1984: Its Library, Exhibitions, & Publications (1984).[29] All these works are useful sources, but
A related area is the history of bibliographical journals, which are often produced by bibliographical societies, though there are illustrious exceptions. A. W. Pollard predictably handled the early history of the Bibliographical Society's journal in excellent fashion ("The Library: A History of Forty Volumes," Library, 4th ser., 10 [1929-30], 398-418), and I have discussed its early newsletter ("The Bibliographical Society's News Sheet, 1894-1920," Gutenberg Jahrbuch 1967, pp. 297-307). Pollard's important three-year experiment, Bibliographica, has received some well-deserved attention from Robin Myers ("Bibliographica," Private Library, 3rd ser., 2 [1979], 86-94). Desmond Flower wrote up the story of his and A. J. A. Symons's Book Collector's Quarterly ("The Book Collector's Quarterly," Private Library, 2nd ser., 1 [1968], 2-6; 3rd ser., 1 [1978], 39-48), and in that journal he had published an assessment of Oliver Simon and Stanley Morison's splendid Fleuron ("Tradition and Experiment: The Fleuron I—VII." Book Collector's Quarterly, 2 [March 1931], 93-100; see also James Moran, "The Fortieth Anniversary of The Fleuron," Black Art, 1 [1962], 106-113). The Fleuron and two other journals were given extended treatment by Grant Shipcott in Typographical Periodicals between the Wars: A Critique of "The Fleuron," "Signature" and "Typography" (1980), the published version of a thesis at Oxford Polytechnic; I know of no other book-length study of this kind, examining a group of related bibliographical or typographical journals, and it is to be hoped that the presence of this book will stimulate others to pursue similar topics. Several briefer overviews, however, are available: Ruari McLean, "Some Typographical Journals, 1900-1939," in Liber Amicorum Herman Liebaers (1984), pp. 307-315; Lawrence P. Murphy, "'Published for Book Lovers': A Short History of American Book Collecting Magazines," Book Collector's Market, 4, no. 5 (September-October 1979), 1, 4-10; Claude A. Prance, "Elliot Stock and Some Old Book-Collecting Magazines," Private Library, 3rd ser., 2 (1979), 42-48; and Joseph Blumenthal, "American Book Arts Magazines," Fine Print, 6, no. 1 (January 1980), 4-9.
Mention of Elliot Stock causes one to think of books in series, for he is perhaps best remembered as the publisher of "The Book Lover's Library," which in twenty-five volumes (1886-1902) is the most extensive series of books on books yet produced. Prance has also written on this
The largest category of the literature of bibliographical history consists of biographical writings. Although there are few book-length biographies, and not many pieces of any length that are critical assessments by scholars who did not know their subjects personally, this literature is nevertheless a rich one because of the high quality of the memorial tributes to the major figures. There is no better way to gain a sense of how the field developed than to read these memoirs; even after a thorough scholarly history appears, they will remain of value for their immediacy in displaying the qualities of mind that shaped the field.
Of the five major figures before 1950—Bradshaw, Proctor, Pollard, McKerrow, and Greg—only Bradshaw (1831-86) has thus far been the subject of much scholarship, and he awaits a modern biography that would give appropriate attention to his bibliographical achievements.
Robert Proctor (1868-1903), the next great figure in the history of the analysis of bibliographical evidence and a follower of Bradshaw's, was the subject of a memorable obituary essay by A. W. Pollard (Library, n.s., 5 [1904], 1-34; reprinted in his 1905 edition of a collection of Proctor's Bibliographical Essays); Pollard also put together a record of "Robert Proctor's Work" (in the same volume of the Library, pp. 192-205, 223-224). In 1951 Victor Scholderer commented on excerpts from Proctor's diary ("The Private Diary of Robert Proctor," Library, 5th ser., 5: 261-269; reprinted in Scholderer's Fifty Essays [1966], pp. 31-37); and recently Barry C. Johnson published a pamphlet, Lost in the Alps: A Portrait of Robert Proctor (1985), which records some new information
Pollard (1859-1944), whose important work first on incunabula and then on Shakespeare made him a transition figure between the nineteenth-century analytical bibliography and that of the twentieth century and whose leadership caused the New Bibliography at first to be thought of as the "school of Pollard," did see into print some fragments of autobiography: "Reminiscences of an Amateur Book-Builder" (Colophon, part 4 [December 1930]) and "My First Fifty Years" (in A Select Bibliography of the Writings of Alfred W. Pollard [1938], pp. 1-15, and completed by Henry Thomas's "From Fifty to Seventy-Five," pp. 16-20), in addition to Two Brothers: Accounts Rendered (1916, 1917), on his two sons who were killed in the war. Following his death John Dover Wilson wrote a thorough and moving memoir (Proceedings of the British Academy, 31 [1945], 256-306) and, a quarter-century later, devoted a section of his autobiography, Milestones on the Dover Road (1969), to Pollard ("The Scholar as Saint: Alfred Pollard," pp. 237-249). F. C. Francis contributed an obituary to the Library (4th ser., 25 [1944-45], 82-86), and the Bibliographical Society's annual report in the same issue called Pollard "the creator of the Society as we know it to-day" (p. 101). The 1938 checklist of Pollard's voluminous writings is supplemented in the volume in the "Great Bibliographers" series, Alfred William Pollard: A Selection of His Essays (edited by Fred W. Roper, 1976), which also reprints Wilson's earlier memoir and includes an essay by Roger Leachman (based on his Master's thesis at the University of North Carolina) entitled "Alfred William Pollard: His Influence on Contemporary Bibliography" (pp. 58-77).
R. B. McKerrow (1872-1940), who published several of the monuments of the New Bibliography (the edition of Nashe, the Introduction to Bibliography, the registers of publishers' devices and title-page borders, the Prolegomena for the Oxford Shakespeare), was given a fine memorial tribute by W. W. Greg (Proceedings of the British Academy, 26 [1940], 488-515) and a checklist by F. C. Francis (Library, 4th ser., 21 [1940-41], 229-263). Besides the essay by Fredson Bowers mentioned earlier, the only other major publication about McKerrow is the volume in the "Great Bibliographers" series, Ronald Brunlees McKerrow: A Selection of His Essays (edited by John Philip Immroth, 1974), which includes Greg's memoir and a revision of Francis's checklist. Robin Myers has also written an account of the Introduction to Bibliography in her "Key Works in Bibliography" series (Antiquarian Book Monthly Review, 5 [1978], 8-9, 11).
W.W. Greg (1875-1959) produced an even larger body of important
One may read in some detail about the lives of a few of the other figures active in the Bibliographical Society in its early years, such as J. Y. W. MacAlister (1856-1925), a founder of the Society (Sir John Young Walker MacAlister: A Memorial for His Family and Friends, 1926—which includes Pollard's memoir originally printed in the Library, 4th ser., 6 [1926], 375-380), Talbot Baines Reed (1852-93), the first Secretary of the Society (Stanley Morison's Talbot Baines Reed, 1960), and Francis Jenkinson (1853-1923), President of the Society from 1900 to 1902 (H. F. Stewart's Francis Jenkinson, 1926). T. J. Wise (1859-1937), President of the Society from 1922 to 1924, has become—as a result of his bibliographical crimes rather than his bibliographical scholarship—the focus of a whole historical industry. The fullest account of the
A few individuals earlier than Bradshaw can be seen, in one respect or another, as forerunners of modern physical bibliography. Thomas Bennet (1673-1728), whose An Essay on the Thirty Nine Articles of Religion (1715) employs printing evidence derived from collation in considering the authenticity of the opening of the twentieth article, has been discussed both by Strickland Gibson ("Thomas Bennet, a Forgotten Bibliographer," Library, 5th ser., 6 [1951], 43-47) and, in an excellent
The next generation after Greg's produced a remarkable group of bibliographers from the ranks of publishers and booksellers. The mentor of many of them was the publisher Michael Sadleir (1888-1957), whose Trollope bibliography appeared as early as 1928; he wrote some "Passages from the Autobiography of a Bibliomaniac" for the great catalogue of his collection, XIX Century Fiction (1951) and was the subject of an amusing piece by Simon Nowell-Smith ("Sadleir Sadleirized," New Colophon, 2 [1949], 135-142). At his death both John Carter (Book
As these names and citations show, book collecting and antiquarian bookselling intersect bibliography so extensively that most biographies of individuals associated with any of these areas are relevant to a study of the others. For a picture of the bibliographical world of the first half of the twentieth century, one should not neglect, for example, such biographical accounts of dealers as Rosenbach (1960), a detailed biography of the great Philadelphia dealer by Edwin Wolf 2nd with John Fleming, and Dukedom Large Enough (1969), the reminiscences of David A. Randall, who was in charge of rare books at Scribner's in New York while John Carter was Scribner's rare-book representative in London. Similarly, the famous physician-collectors William Osler (1849-1919) and Geoffrey Keynes (1887-1982) have a place in bibliographical history, the former for Bibliotheca Osleriana and Incunabula Medica and the latter for his long series of bibliographies of writers he collected (both were presidents of the Bibliographical Society). For both, we have their own statements about their collecting ("The Collecting of a Library" in Bibliotheca Osleriana [1929]; "Religio Bibliographici" in Keynes's Bibliotheca Bibliographici [1964], earlier published in the Library, 5th ser., 8 [1953], 63-76) and full-length biographical accounts (Harvey Cushing's massive The Life of Sir William Osler [1926] and Keynes's autobiography, The Gates of Memory [1981]), along with some later assessments (particularly Charles G. Roland's of Osler and Nicolas Barker's of Keynes).[34]
Dealers and collectors seem to have engaged in more autobiographical writing than have bibliographers, some of it not perhaps immediately related to the concerns of analytical bibliographers but all of it contributing to a picture of that part of the book world in which analytical bibliography exists.[35] And this picture has been extended by a number of scholarly studies of dealers and collectors, some notable examples (besides Rosenbach and Phillipps Studies) being Wilmarth Lewis's Horace Walpole's Library (1958), Wyman W. Parker's Henry Stevens of Vermont (1963), B. L. Reid's The Man from New York [John Quinn] (1968), Cyril E. Wright's Fontes Harleiani (1971; following his and Ruth C. Wright's edition of The Diary of Humphrey Wanley, 1966), Anthony Hobson's Apollo and Pegasus [Grimaldi] (1975), and Nicolas Barker's Bibliotheca Lindesiana (1977), along with such catalogues as Allen T. Hazen's A Catalogue of Horace Walpole's Library (1969), Gabriel Austin's The Library of Jean Grolier (1971), and Edwin Wolf's The Library of James Logan of Philadelphia (1974). Scholars of typographic history are another class of students of the physical book: the
In the second half of the twentieth century the dominant bibliographical scholar is Fredson Bowers. He, like Greg, has been the focus of a great deal of commentary; but the most clearly historical pieces that have thus far appeared about him are probably two essays included in "Fredson Bowers at Eighty" (PBSA, 79 [1985], 173-226; also printed as a separate)—David Vander Meulen's (mentioned above) on the Principles and mine on "The Achievement of Fredson Bowers." A pictorial booklet, A Keepsake to Honor Fredson Bowers, marked the occasion of his retirement in 1974; a checklist of his writings is included in his Essays in Bibliography, Text, and Editing (1975), pp. 531-548, and is supplemented in PBSA, 79 (1985), 221-226. His own tribute to Charlton Hinman (Book Collector, 26 [1977], 389-391) is worth examining for his comments on the other primary developer of analytical bibliography in this period. Robin Myers has discussed both Bowers's Principles and Hinman's The Printing and Proof-Reading of the First Folio of Shakespeare (1963) in her "Key Works" series (Antiquarian Book Monthly Review, 6 [1979], 362-367 passim; 8 [1981], 219-223).[38]
All these biographical accounts, and the studies of bibliographical societies and journals, provide glimpses—sometimes scholarly, sometimes journalistic and anecdotal—into particular segments of bibliographical history. Such writings form part of the basis, along with the bibliographical work itself, on which more comprehensive histories can be constructed. But very few efforts of broader scope have been attempted. Greg's "Notes on Dramatic Bibliographers" (Malone Society Collections, 1, parts 4-5 [1911], 324-340; 2, part 3 [1931], 235-238) limits itself to lists (from 1656 to 1812) of English plays—making the point that "a familiarity with the history of dramatic bibliography is often necessary for the criticism of current and received opinions" (p. 324). A true precursor of F. P. Wilson's essay is Percy Simpson's "The Bibliographical Study of Shakespeare" (Oxford Bibliographical Society Publications, 1, part 1 [1923], 19-53), an excellent piece of work that "attempts to show historically how recent scholarship has worked with effect on the problems of the text of Shakespeare" (p. 49) and sees Pollard as the leading figure.[39] There has been nothing, however, like Wilson's piece since. George Watson Cole, in 1929, published "A Survey of the Bibliography of English Literature, 1475-1640, with Especial Reference to the Work of the Bibliographical Society of London" (PBSA, 23, part 2: 1-95),
III
The works that I have alluded to here are only a sampling of what exists—but, I hope, a sampling that suggests the range of the published material and one that includes most of the basic items. Many more books and essays that are retrospective in one way or another could be mentioned, particularly those that are anniversary or obituary tributes to particular individuals. There is a large roster of people, active during the Bibliographical Society's first half-century, who deserve attention, in addition to those already mentioned as subjects of historical writing—among them, G. F. Barwick, R. W. Chapman, W. A. Copinger, Cyril Davenport, E. Gordon Duff, F. S. Ferguson, F. C. Francis, Stephen Gaselee, Strickland Gibson, E. P. Goldschmidt, Konrad Haebler, G. D. Hobson, Falconer Madan, Henry R. Plomer, Charles Sayle, Percy Simpson, Henry Thomas, Edward Maunde Thompson, W. H. J. Weale, H. B. Wheatley, Harold Williams, Iolo A. Williams, F. P. Wilson, and J. Dover Wilson. One can locate obituaries, DNB articles, and the like for these figures and others, just as one can find—through indexes, guides, and patient searches—further bibliographical writings with some historical perspective. Voluminous as this literature is, it is largely the natural by-product of the development of the field, not the result of disinterested scholarly investigation. Of the works that I have named, the majority
The writings mentioned here, and others like them, should be familiar to all bibliographers, for they show what traditions have grown up in the field and how previous bibliographers have looked at their colleagues and predecessors. But the historian of bibliography, in addition to knowing this retrospective work, must of course return to the bibliographical scholarship itself and to any unpublished material relating to it. The scholarship is not as conveniently indexed as one might wish, and some of it remains hidden in monographs and essays indexed only under the authors of the books analyzed, not under the bibliographical approaches employed. But much of the material is in fact accessible through a series of indexes and guides,[41] though their presence should never cause one to neglect the systematic searching of shelves and of periodicals, a process by which one's sense of the growth of a field will more fully emerge. The whereabouts of the relevant collections of unpublished letters and papers are, as in all fields, less easy to determine. Scholars' papers, when they are preserved at all, are likely to be in the institutions with which they were associated, for such papers are regarded more often as part of institutional archives than as manuscripts of independent interest. As long as the papers are properly cared for, one should perhaps not complain; many scholars do, after all, play prominent roles in their institutions and deserve a place in the collections that support institutional memory. But many scholars (and not always different ones) have taken important parts on the broader stage of international scholarship; and the fact that their papers are often regarded as being primarily of local interest suggests the position that the history of scholarship occupies in the hierarchy adopted by many collectors of manuscripts in institutional libraries.
Writing history—the attempt to reconstruct some segment of the past —is always a creative activity. The shapes that historians give to the past are the products of particular points of view and particular selections of details. As we move forward, our sense of how we got to our present location changes, and new versions of the past continually emerge. When the subject of our history is humanistic scholarship, we are looking at individuals who were historians themselves, individuals who chose the study of the past as their way of coming to terms with the world. Historians of science and of belles lettres, painting, music, and the other arts deal with the same kind of individuals, who happen to have taken different routes to satisfy the same creative urge, the urge to place the stamp of human control on what seems to be the chaos outside the mind.
Notes
This work is surveyed in Hugh Lloyd-Jones's introduction to Alan Harris's translation of Wilamowitz (History of Classical Scholarship, 1982). The history of classical scholarship and the history of bibliography are in fact linked, a major connection being the history of textual criticism. Two basic works on the textual criticism of the classics are L. D. Reynolds and N. G. Wilson's Scribes and Scholars: A Guide to the Transmission of Greek and Latin Literature (1968, 1974) and E. J. Kenney's The Classical Text: Aspects of Editing in the Age of the Printed Book (1974). See also some of the essays of M. D. Feld, such as "The Early Evolution of the Authoritative Text," Harvard Library Bulletin, 26 (1978), 81-111, and "A Theory of the Early Italian Printing Firm," ibid., 33 (1985), 341-377. There are a number of biographies of prominent editors of the classics: an impressive recent example is Anthony Grafton's Joseph Scaliger: A Study in the History of Classical Scholarship. I: Textual Criticism and Exegesis (1983). See also C. O. Brink, English Classical Scholarship: Historical Reflections on Bentley, Porson and Housman (1986).
Although we do have such works as Howard Mumford Jones's The Theory of American Literature (1948, 1965) and Jay B. Hubbell's Who Are the Major American Writers? (1972).
The Center is housed in the Manuscript Department of Perkins Library and publishes a newsletter reporting current acquisitions.
See Lloyd Hibberd, "Physical and Reference Bibliography," Library, 5th ser., 20 (1965), 124-134.
An earlier standard work is Ernest D. Grand, "Bibliographie," in La grande encyclopédie, 6 (1888), 598-682. Besterman's reflections appear in his lecture Fifty Years a Bookman (1974). See also Lester Condit, "Bibliography in Its Prenatal Existence," Library Quarterly, 7 (1937), 564-576; John Webster Spargo, "Some Reference Books of the 16th and 17th Centuries: A Finding List," PBSA, 31 (1937), 133-175; John F. Fulton, The Great Medical Bibliographers (1951); Jesse H. Shera, "The Beginnings of Systematic Bibliography in America, 1642-1799," in Essays Honoring Lawrence C. Wroth (1951), pp. 263-278; Archer
See, in particular, his helpful survey of "The History of Bibliography," pp. 7-10, and his annotated list of "Major Writings on the Compiling of Bibliographies, 1883-1983," pp. 161-181. Krummel is at present undertaking further work on the history of enumerative bibliography. His forthcoming essay for Library Quarterly, "The Dialectics of Enumerative Bibliography: Observations on the Historical Study of the Practices of Citation," concludes, "The history of bibliography is close to the very essence of the history of learning."
The preface to the first volume of the revised STC (1986) concisely recounts the origins and development of the undertaking, describing A. W. Pollard as "the pre-eminent force in bibliographical studies in the first half of this century" (p. vii).
Jackson, "The Revised STC: A Progress Report," Book Collector, 4 (1955), 16-27; Pantzer, "The Serpentine Progress of the STC Revision," PBSA, 62 (1968), 297-311; Wing, "The Making of the Short Title Catalogue 1641-1700," PBSA, 45 (1951), 59-69; Alston, "Progress toward an Eighteenth Century STC," Direction Line, 4 (Autumn 1977), 1-15. The ESTC, in particular, has generated a considerable primary literature that will provide material for the future historian: there is the project's newsletter, Factotum (1978- ), its Occasional Papers, and such books as R. C. Alston and M. J. Jannetta's Bibliography, Machine-Readable Cataloguing and the ESTC (1978). Other related projects, like the Nineteenth Century Short Title Catalogue, now have newsletters as well (on this project, see also G. Averley and F. J. G. Robinson, "The Nineteenth Century Short Title Catalogue," Library Association Rare Books Group Newsletter, 22 [November 1983], 15-20).
McCrimmon, Power, Politics and Print: The Publication of the British Museum Catalogue, 1881-1900 (1981); Chaplin, "The General Catalogue of Printed Books, 1881-1981," British Library Journal, 7 (1981), 109-119; Smith, "The National Union Catalog: Pre-1956 Imprints," Book Collector, 31 (1982), 445-462 (see also In Celebration: The National Union Catalog, Pre-1956 Imprints, ed. John Y. Cole, 1981); Norris, A History of Cataloguing and Cataloguing Methods, 1100-1850, with an Introductory Survey of Ancient Times (1939); London, "The Place and Role of Bibliographic Description in General and Individual Catalogues: A Historical Analysis," Libri, 30 (1980), 253-284. On the British Museum, see further F. J. Hill, "'Fortescue': The British Museum and British Library Subject Index," British Library Journal, 12 (1986), 58-63.
The history of the changing scope of Sabin's Dictionary (which, though a subject bibliography, is also concerned with recording editions and contains a considerable amount of bibliographical analysis) reflects the complex of factors that influence the final form a bibliography takes. See R. W. G. Vail, "Sabin's Dictionary," PBSA, 31 (1937), 1-9; and cf. the article by Thomas R. Adams cited in note 38 below.
These works are all cited below. See also Clarence S. Brigham, Fifty Years of Collecting Americana for the Library of the American Antiquarian Society, 1908-1958 (1959); W. A. Munford, Edward Edwards (1963); William L. Williamson, William Frederick Poole and the Modern Library Movement (1963); Edward Miller, Prince of Librarians [Panizzi] (1967); Margaret B. Stillwell, Librarians Are Human (1973); Keyes D. Metcalf, Random Recollections of an Anachronism (1980); and Philip J. Weimerskirch, Antonio Panizzi and the British Museum Library (1982). The Scarecrow Press has established a series called "Autobiographies and Biographies of Noted Librarians." A list of "Biographies of Librarians and Library Benefactors" is included in Harris and Davis's American Library History (see note 15 below), pp. 184-218.
A historical study of a library reference work is Stuart J. Glogoff, "Cannons' Bibliography of Library Economy and Its Role in the Development of Bibliographic Tools in Librarianship," Journal of Library History, 12 (1977), 57-63.
Such as Ernest A. Savage's The Story of Libraries and Book-Collecting (1909) and Old English Libraries (1911), James Westfall Thompson's The Medieval Library (1939) and
Such as William D. Johnston's of the Library of Congress (1904), Arundell Esdaile's of the British Museum library (1946), Edmund Craster's of the Bodleian from 1845 to 1945 (1952), Walter Muir Whitehill's of the Boston Public Library (1956), Phyllis Dain's of the New York Public Library (1972), Edward Miller's of the British Museum (1973), Philip Gaskell's of Trinity College (Cambridge) Library (1980), Ian Philip's of the Bodleian in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries (1983), and J. C. T. Oates's and David McKitterick's of Cambridge University Library (1986). Some libraries have published substantial accounts in their own journals: e.g., "The Founding of the Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery," Huntington Library Quarterly, 32 (1969), 291-373 (and as a separate); William Bentinck-Smith, Building a Great Library: The Coolidge Years at Harvard (1976), originally published in the Harvard Library Bulletin; and William S. Dix, "The Princeton University Library in the Eighteenth Century," Princeton University Library Chronicle, 40 (1978-79), 1-102. Interim substitutes for full-scale histories have been provided by various anniversary volumes and exhibition catalogues, such as The Houghton Library, 1942-1967 (1967), Major Acquisitions of The Pierpont Morgan Library, 1924-1974 (1974), and The Lilly Library: The First Quarter Century, 1960-1985 (1985), and by chronologies, such as John Y. Cole's For Congress and the Nation (1979). (A broader history in the form of a chronology is Elizabeth W. Stone, American Library Development, 1600-1899 [1977].)
Examples for American library history are Michael H. Harris, A Guide to Research in American Library History (1968); Harris and Donald G. Davis, Jr., American Library History: A Bibliography (1978); and the series of state checklists sponsored by the Journal of Library History.
Some historical surveys of the scholarship devoted to these areas have been produced. See note 41 below.
Listings of currently available books are one kind of reference tool that arises as a by-product of the relationship between publishers, dealers, and buyers; records of copy-rights constitute a similar tool that emerges from legal requirements affecting the activities of publishing and bookselling. Several book-length studies have treated such works historically: Adolf Growoll, Book Trade Bibliography in the United States in the Nineteenth Century (1898) and Three Centuries of English Book Trade Bibliography (1903); R. C. B. Partridge, A History of the Legal Deposit of Books throughout the British Empire (1938); Le Roy H. Linder, The Rise of Current Complete National Bibliography (1959); and Joseph W. Rogers, U. S. National Bibliography and the Copyright Law (1960). See also G. T. Tanselle, "Copyright Records and the Bibliographer," Studies in Bibliography, 22 (1969), 77-124; reprinted in Selected Studies in Bibliography (1979), pp. 93-138. The history of a related reference tool, auction records, has been discussed by V. H. Paltsits in "The Beginning of American Book Auction Records during the First Quarter Century," American Book Prices Current 1943-44, pp. xi-xiv. For historical surveys of the work on publishing, see G. T. Tanselle, "The Historiography of American Literary Publishing," SB, 18 (1965), 3-39; and Joe W. Kraus, "The History of Publishing as a Field of Research for Librarians and Others," Advances in Library Administration and Organization, 5 (1986), 33-65. See also note 41 below.
Such as John Lawler's Book Auctions in England in the Seventeenth Century (1898), Bernard Quaritch's Contributions towards a Dictionary of English Book-Collectors (1892-1921), Charles and Mary Elton's The Great Book-Collectors (1893), William Y. Fletcher's English Book Collectors (1902), Carl L. Cannon's American Book Collectors and Collecting (1941), and Donald C. Dickinson's Dictionary of American Book Collectors (1986).
Other important works of bibliophilic history that reflect a thorough understanding of bibliographical evidence are Seymour De Ricci, English Collectors of Books and Manuscripts (1930); Ruth S. Granniss, "American Book Collecting and the Growth of Libraries," in Hellmut Lehmann-Haupt et al., The Book in America (1939), pp. 293-381; and Edwin Wolf
"The Literature of Book Collecting," in Book Collecting: A Modern Guide, ed. Jean Peters (1977), pp. 209-271.
This volume has also been discussed by Robin Myers in Antiquarian Book Monthly Review, 6 (1979), 148-153—as part of a series on "Key Works in Bibliography" (other installments deal with Bowers, Greg, Hinman, McKerrow, Sadleir, and Simpson; most are cited individually below).
"Physical Bibliography in the Twentieth Century," in Books, Manuscripts, and the History of Medicine: Essays on the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Osler Library, ed. Philip M. Teigen (1982), pp. 55-79; and "The Evolving Role of Bibliography, 1884-1984," in Books and Prints, Past and Future: Papers Presented at the Grolier Club Centennial Convocation (1984), pp. 15-31.
I have also made these points in two other essays that deal more narrowly with the history of descriptive bibliography: "The Descriptive Bibliography of American Authors," SB, 21 (1968), 1-24; "The Descriptive Bibliography of Eighteenth-Century Books," in Eighteenth-Century English Books Considered by Librarians and Booksellers, Bibliographers and Collectors (1976), pp. 22-33.
Both in the body of the lecture and in an appendix, "Henry Bradshaw and the Development of the Collational Formula," which is the most detailed historical account of the formula yet written.
In connection with studying the origins of the Bibliographical Society, one should take a look at W. H. K. Wright's "The Library Association, 1877-1897: A Retrospect," Library, 1st ser., 10 (1898), 197-207, 245-254.
Barwick says that the Bibliographical Society in London "has done more to encourage and develop scientific bibliography than any other in the world," and he makes the charitable observation on the Bibliographical Society of America that "Its work is scientific when necessary, but its scope is very wide."
Some of the same material appears in her The Work of a Book Club (1937), a pamphlet that includes a biographical sketch of Granniss by Jean B. Barr (with a list of Granniss's writings).
See also A. W. Pollard, "Bibliographische Klubs in England," Zeitschrift für Bücher-freunde, 1 (1897), 99-101.
Other examples are the Historical Sketch of the Club of Odd Volumes (1950); Russell H. Anderson's The Rowfant Club: A History (1955); David Magee's The Hundredth Book: A Bibliography of the Publications of the Book Club of California & a History of the Club (1958); Robert E. Spiller's The Philobiblon Club of Philadelphia: The First Eighty Years, 1893-1973 (1973); James Moran's The Double Crown Club: A History of Fifty Years (1974); Philip Ward and David Chambers's "Twenty-Five Years of the P.L.A. [Private Libraries Association]," Private Library, 3rd ser., 3 (1980), 116-122, 160-167; 4 (1981), 73-86; and Stephen Parks's The Elizabethan Club of Yale University and Its Library (1986), with a historical essay by Alan Bell.
One should turn to the latter list for a fuller record than I am providing here. For the other figures discussed below, as for Bradshaw, I am selective in my references but always mention checklists of writings by and about them.
My survey of the influence of Greg's "Rationale," which includes an analysis of the essay itself, is an example of a historical study that is also part of the analytical literature of the subject. See "Greg's 'Rationale of Copy-Text' and the Editing of American Literature," SB, 28 (1975), 167-229; this essay and the two later essays that continued the survey (in SB in 1981 and 1986) are now gathered in Textual Criticism since Greg: A Chronicle, 1950-1985 (1988).
A basic work, which appeared shortly after Housman's death, is A. S. F. Gow's A. E. Housman: A Sketch, together with a List of His Writings and Indexes to His Classical
Before the New Bibliography, the editing of printed texts was not usually based on bibliographical investigations, and the history of earlier editing is therefore on the fringes of bibliographical history. But there has been considerable attention to Capell and other early editors of Shakespeare: e.g., Thomas R. Lounsbury, The First Editors of Shakespeare (Pope and Theobald) (1906); R. B. McKerrow, "The Treatment of Shakespeare's Text by His Earlier Editors, 1709-1768," Proceedings of the British Academy, 19 (1933), 89-122; Alice Walker, "Edward Capell and His Edition of Shakespeare," ibid., 46 (1960), 131-145; S. K. Sen, Capell and Malone and Modern Critical Bibliography (1961); R. G. Moyles, "Edward Capell (1713-1781) as Editor of Paradise Lost," Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society, 6, part 4 (1975), 252-261.
Roland, "'Dry, Dusty, Tedious, Accursed, Hateful Bibliography': Osler and British Bibliography," in Books, Manuscripts, and the History of Medicine (see note 22 above), pp. 9-27; Barker, "Geoffrey Keynes," Book Collector, 31 (1982), 411-426 passim. See also Geoffrey Keynes: Tributes on the Occasion of His Seventieth Birthday (1961), which contains a checklist; and Mary Kingsbury, "Book Collector, Bibliographer, and Benefactor of Libraries: Sir William Osler," Journal of Library History, 16 (1981), 187-198.
Some examples of booksellers' recollections (besides Muir's and Randall's): James Lackington's Memoirs (1791) and Confessions (1804), Henry Stevens's Recollections of Mr. James Lenox of New York (1886), Walter T. Spencer's Forty Years in My Bookshop (1923), Charles E. Goodspeed's Yankee Bookseller (1937), Charles P. Everitt's The Adventures of a Treasure Hunter (1951), Maurice L. Ettinghausen's Rare Books and Royal Collectors (1966), Harold C. Holmes's Some Random Reminiscences (1967), E. Millicent Sowerby's Rare Books and Rare People [Voynich, Sotheby's, Rosenbach] (1967), David Low's "With All Faults" (1973), David Magee's Infinite Riches (1973), Leona Rostenberg and Madeleine B. Stern's Old & Rare (1974) and Between Boards (1977), John H. Jenkins's Audubon and Other Capers (1976), Harry W. Schwartz's Fifty Years in My Bookstore (1977), H. P. Kraus's A Rare Book Saga (1978), O. F. Snelling's Rare Books and Rarer People [Hodgson's] (1982), and George Sims's The Rare Book Game (1985). Among collectors' memoirs, at least Henry R. Wagner's Collecting, Especially Books (1941) and Bullion to Books (1942) and Wilmarth Lewis's Collector's Progress (1951) and One Man's Education (1967) should be mentioned. Many valuable shorter pieces also exist—such as the four by Gordon N. Ray that form the first section of the forthcoming volume of his essays, Books as a Way of Life. A unique work in this field is the two-volume set (Four Oaks Farm, Four Oaks Library, edited by Gabriel Austin, 1967) dealing with the collection formed by Donald and Mary Hyde and with its setting; essays by various hands cover different aspects of the library and the farm, some of those in the Farm volume making particularly clear the social context of scholarship —most notably Mary Hyde's essay on "The Guest Book" (pp. 38-86), generously illustrated with photographs of the visitors. Another essay of Mary Hyde's that conveys this same sense is "Grolier Watching by a Lady, 1943-1966," in Books and Prints, Past and Future (see note 22 above), pp. 1-13.
Such as S. H. Steinberg's in Proceedings of the British Academy, 53 (1967), 449-468; James Moran's in Monotype Recorder, 43 (1968); Brooke Crutchley's in Two Men: Walter Lewis and Stanley Morison at Cambridge (1968); those of Nicolas Barker, Douglas Cleverdon, and others in Stanley Morison, 1889-1967: A Radio Portrait (1969); and Douglas Cleverdon's in Stanley Morison and Eric Gill, 1925-1933 (1983).
For example, Victor Scholderer's Fifty Essays in Fifteenth- and Sixteenth-Century Bibliography (1966) and Essays in Honour of Victor Scholderer (1970), both edited by Dennis E. Rhodes, and A. F. Johnson's Selected Essays on Books and Printing, edited by P. H.
Few Americans before Bowers and Hinman have been mentioned here, particularly in connection with analytical bibliography and textual study. The earlier American tradition, which had emerged in the study of Americana, made little advance in analytical bibliography and indeed often neglected the physical analysis of books. For some discussion of this point, see my essay "The Bibliography and Textual Study of American Books," Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, 95 (1985), 113-151 (esp. 114-125), reprinted in Needs and Opportunities in the History of the Book: America, 1639-1876, ed. David D. Hall and John B. Hench (1987), pp. 233-271. Some biographical accounts of figures in this tradition are Victor Hugo Paltsits, "Wilberforce Eames: A Bio-Bibliographical Narrative," in Bibliographical Essays: A Tribute to Wilberforce Eames (1924), pp. 1-26; Randolph G. Adams, "Henry Harrisse," in Three Americanists (1939), pp. 1-33; Edward G. Holley, Charles Evans, American Bibliographer (1963); Walter Muir Whitehill, "George Parker Winship," in Analecta Biographica (1969), pp. 1-14; the volume edited by Scott Bruntjen and M. L. Young on Douglas C. McMurtrie: Bibliographer and Historian of Printing (in the "Great Bibliographers" series, 1979); and Michael Winship, Hermann Ernst Ludewig: America's Forgotten Bibliographer (1986). For a historical sketch of the recording of Americana, see Thomas R. Adams, "Bibliotheca Americana: A Merry Maze of Changing Concepts," PBSA, 63 (1969), 247-260. A bibliographer who did regularly record the structure of books was Thomas J. Holmes, bibliographer of the Mathers; his autobiography is The Education of a Bibliographer (1957).
Greg also discussed the beginning of analytical bibliography, with special reference to Pollard, in "The Hamlet Texts and Recent Work in Shakespearian Bibliography," Modern Language Review, 14 (1919), 380-385.
Among the longest sketches are those on John Payne Collier (pp. 29-32), William Blades (pp. 38-40), William Carew Hazlitt (pp. 41-47), Alexander Dyce (pp. 47-49), and Falconer Madan (pp. 59-61).
See B. J. McMullin, "Indexing the Periodical Literature of Anglo-American Bibliography," SB, 33 (1980), 1-17; and G. T. Tanselle, "The Periodical Literature of English and American Bibliography," SB, 26 (1973), 167-191. In addition to the periodical indexes cited in these essays, there are some guides that list monographic as well as periodical contributions, such as T. H. Howard-Hill, Index to British Literary Bibliography (1969- ); Robin Myers, The British Book Trade from Caxton to the Present Day: A Bibliographical Guide (1973); and G. T. Tanselle, Guide to the Study of United States Imprints (1971). For individual areas of book production, there are some guides of uneven quality: B. H. Breslauer's The Uses of Bookbinding Literature (1986) is excellent (with both an essay and a listing), as is Gavin Bridson and Geoffrey Wakeman's Printmaking & Picture Printing: A Bibliographical Guide to Artistic & Industrial Techniques in Britain, 1750-1900 (1984); less satisfactory are the lists of Vito J. Brenni, such as Book Illustration and Decoration: A Guide to Research (1980), Bookbinding: A Guide to the Literature (1982), Book Printing in Britain and America: A Guide to the Literature and a Directory of Printers (1983), and The Art and History of Book Printing: A Topical Bibliography (1984). Irving Leif's An International Sourcebook of Paper History (1978) was given a substantial supplement shortly after its publication: Kate Frost, "Supplement to Leif: A Checklist of Watermark History, Production, and Reproduction Research," Direction Line, 8 (Spring 1979), 33-56. See also notes 15 and 20 above.
I am not suggesting that the concepts of bibliography and textual criticism are limited to objects carrying verbal messages; they have often been applied to musical texts and are increasingly being used in connection with films. But the bulk of bibliographical and textual work in the past has focused on the transmission of verbal messages; and there is no indication that verbal messages, in one form or another, will be less central to human affairs in the future.
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