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Showing 1 to 15 of 26 results Save | Export
Maack, Mary Niles – Wilson Library Bulletin, 1980
Describes the special collection of the Saint Paul (Minnesota) Public Library, named in honor of former library director, Perrie Jones, which contains over 1,700 books that illustrate significant stages in the history of printing from the sixteenth to the twentieth century. (Author)
Descriptors: History, Library Collections, Printing, Public Libraries
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Higgins, Dick – Visible Language, 1992
Outlines briefly the process by which the Fluxus community coalesced. Recounts the birthing of Something Else Press, Inc., and the transformation of aspects of the press' objectives into Printed Editions. Discusses the parallel concerns shared by Something Else Press and Fluxus publication activities as well as their divergent agendas and…
Descriptors: Art History, Printing, Publications, Publishing Industry
Goble, Corban – 1985
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain), who had set type by hand in his youth, had believed that a mechanical composer was beyond the realm of possibility. In 1880, however, he invested $2,000 in an early typesetter invented by James W. Paige. Both Clemens and Paige dreamed of immense wealth that would be generated by selling thousands of Paige Compositors.…
Descriptors: Inventions, Printing, Technological Advancement, United States History
Barnhill, Georgia B. – 2001
This paper discusses the use of lithography in the United States in the early 1800s. Highlights include: the development of lithography in Germany between 1796 and 1798; early expectations for lithography; competition against the existing technology for the production of images--relief prints and copper-plate engravings; examples of 18th-century…
Descriptors: Illustrations, Nineteenth Century Literature, Printed Materials, Printing
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Pannabecker, John R. – Journal of Industrial Teacher Education, 1992
Analyzes the description of letterpress printing technology in the "Encyclopedie" of Diderot and d'Alembert. Examines how the authors distilled information about mechanical arts from craft culture, the shop, and traditional apprenticeship practices. (SK)
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Craft Workers, Encyclopedias, Industrial Arts
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Samuels, Joel L. – Library Quarterly, 1988
Traces historical development of the John M. Wing foundation on the History of Printing beginning with its benefactor, John M. Wing, through the contributions of its custodians: Pierce Butler, 1920-31; Ernst F. Detterer, 1931-47; and James M. Wells, 1951-84. Focus is on the formulation and application of the collecting policy. (75 references)…
Descriptors: Library Collection Development, Library Collections, Policy Formation, Printing
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Henry, Susan – Journalism Quarterly, 1980
Describes the life and career of Sarah Goddard, who ran a Providence, Rhode Island, printing business between 1765 and 1768; shows how she transformed a failing business into a profitable one and how her commitment to printing as a community service surpassed that of her more famous son. (GT)
Descriptors: Colonial History (United States), Employed Women, Females, Journalism
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Ewen, Stuart – Journal of Communication, 1979
Traces the development of printing and other technologies of communication. Discusses their impact on society. (JMF)
Descriptors: Advertising, Communications, Films, Information Dissemination
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deLong, Suzanne – Journal of Government Information, 1996
The U.S. Serial Set has changed since its beginning in 1817. The early Serial Set is a large and comprehensive record of government activity, but the 20th-century Serial Set has been reduced in scope and contains almost no executive branch documents and only a select portion of congressional publications. Four tables outline the contents of the…
Descriptors: Change, Federal Government, Government Publications, Government Role
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Shaw, Felicity – Microform Review, 1994
Description of the National Library of Bhutan and its manuscript microfilming project; selection of texts and preparation and carving of wood blocks for printing; conservation measures for the preservation of manuscripts and printing blocks; and possible future developments.(LRW)
Descriptors: Cultural Maintenance, Foreign Countries, Futures (of Society), Manuscripts
Wright, A. J. – 1990
This document consists of a chronology of historic events. There is no accompanying text. Divided into four sections, the outline succinctly sketches the development of printing and publishing in Alabama in the nineteenth century. The opening section, which lists early publications and their dates of first appearance, features newspapers, legal…
Descriptors: Area Studies, Authors, Editors, Journalism History
Solomon, William S. – 1989
Colonial printers were more or less forced to take sides during the Revolutionary era. As they did so, their social status changed from that akin to mechanics to that of spokespersons of a social movement. From this time on, the gradual separation of editor from printer formed a social basis for defining a journalist's tasks as editorial, not…
Descriptors: Editors, Journalism History, Mass Media Role, Media Research
Choo, Chang Soh – 1980
This description of the scope, legal deposit basis, preparation, and printing of the Singapore National Bibliography since its inception in 1967, provides insight into the searching tasks and editing processes involved in planning a retrospective bibliography, and proposes a chronologically inverted printing scheme for pre-1967 imprints, to be…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Cataloging, Depository Libraries, Information Dissemination
Fishleder, Paul – 1979
The New York newspaper strike of 1978 was the direct result of a series of events that started in 1923 when the pressmen's union established a system that provided a minimum fixed number of pressmen per press unit and legitimized a loose labor pool. From that time, the number of pressmen increased through family-dominated union management that…
Descriptors: Arbitration, Collective Bargaining, Labor Demands, Labor Problems
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Stankiewicz, Mary Ann – Studies in Art Education, 1985
The curriculum movement known as picture study was, in part, the result of the late nineteenth-century development of printing processes capable of reproducing works of art. This description of the reproductions used in picture study illustrates how popularist attitudes toward art and technological changes set the context for this art movement.…
Descriptors: Art, Art Education, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education
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