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Bound to be Modern : Cloth Bindings and Literature as Thing

Author

Summary, in English

Paper presented at the seminar "Reading Things" at CRAASH, Cambridge University. With industrialization in the 19th century, book culture went through a number of changes. Like many other goods, literature began to be sold in retail packages – readymade bookbindings that conveyed the character of the literary content of the book. Objects such as packages and bookbindings took on an increasingly important place in the public and private spaces of modern society, spreading new imagery and symbolic messages. The use and handling of books and packages coincided with a use and handling of trade marks and logotypes and of a new world of images which introduced a number of new elements in everyday life.



In this paper I will concentrate on the emergence of publishers’ bookbindings, and especially decorated cloth bindings: Why did publishers take on the commissioning of bindings, what kind of interaction between technology, economics and aesthetics took place on the book market, how can we understand the changes in binding design and how did modern, decorated bookbindings influence peoples relations to books and literature?

Publishing year

2014

Language

English

Document type

Conference paper

Topic

  • Cultural Studies

Keywords

  • bookbindings
  • publishers' bindings
  • cloth bindings
  • modernity
  • books

Conference name

Reading Things

Conference date

2014-03-12

Status

Unpublished

Project

  • Aspects of the Book. Books and Literature between Economics and Aesthetics 1750–2002.