This volume proposes a new and radically inclusive approach to the study of the book by using gender as a tool of analysis. While female authors and women in the book trades have long been studied, gender itself has yet to be explored as a methodology rather than a subject in book history. We argue that putting gender analysis into practice requires thinking inclusively about both the book world and the interactions of its participants from the beginning.
With twenty-five pioneering case studies that stretch from colonial Peru to modern Delhi, using a variety of intersectional methodologies including network analysis, critical bibliography, and queer theory,
Gender and the Book Trades sets out an innovative method of analysing the printed book.
Contributors: Rebecca Baumann, Montserrat Cachero, Verônica Calsoni Lima, Matthew Chambers, Kanupriya Dhingra, Nora Epstein, Natalia Fantetti, Jessica Farrell-Jobst, Agnes Gehbald, Rabia Gregory, Laura Guinot Ferri, Elizabeth Le Roux, Sarah Lubelski, Natalia Maillard Álvarez, Charley Matthews, Susan McElrath, Kirk Melnikoff, Malcolm Noble, Kate Ozment, Joanna Rozendaal, Kandice Sharren, Valentina Sonzini, Elise Watson, Joëlle Weis, Helen Williams, Alexandra E. Wingate, and Georgianna Ziegler.
Elise Watson, Ph.D. (2022, University of St Andrews) is a postdoctoral researcher on the Universal Short Title Catalogue project at the University of St Andrews. Her research focuses on print, gender, Catholicism, and religious coexistence in the early modern period.
Jessica Farrell-Jobst, Ph.D. (2021, University of St Andrews) is an early career scholar and educator. Her research explores the multifaceted ways in which women have participated in the early modern book trades, the pedagogy of gender, and erasure and officiality in historical methods and sources.
Contents
List of Figures and Tables Notes on Contributors
1
Gender as an Inclusive Model for Book History Elise Watson, Jessica Farrell-Jobst and Nora Epstein
Part 1: Familiar Networks
2
Women in the Family Business: the Case for Nuremberg’s Endter Printing Dynasty Jessica Farrell-Jobst
3
Knitting Ties in a Global Trade Network: the Maldonado Women and the Book Business in the Sixteenth-Century Iberian Atlantic Natalia Maillard Álvarez and Montserrat Cachero
4
Women in the Workshop: Property Structure, Print Culture, and Female Management in Colonial Peru Agnes Gehbald
Part 2: Publishing Gender
5
‘Best Left to Men’: Women and Publishing Histories in Africa Elizabeth Le Roux
6
Beneath the Bright Covers: Women in Twentieth-Century Paperback Publishing Rebecca Baumann
7
A ‘Gentlemen’s Profession’: the Historical Masculinisation of British Publishing Sarah Lubelski
Part 3: Editorial Interventions
8
Mary Hays’ Female Biography (1803), the Anthology, and Reading as Gendered Labour in the Early Nineteenth Century Book Trades Charley Matthews
9
Constantia Grierson’s Ghost and the Problem of Posthumous Print Helen Williams
Part 4: The Bookshop and the Marketplace
10
The Bookshop Salon: Sylvia Beach, Adrienne Monnier, and Gendered Forms of Bookselling in Interwar Paris Matthew Chambers
11
Boundary Work in the Bazaar: the Women Booksellers of Daryaganj Sunday Book Market Kanupriya Dhingra
12
The Bookseller and the Lady: the Literary Ambitions of Anna de Sterke (1755–1831) and Her Dealings with Bookseller Luchtmans J.C. Rozendaal
Part 5: Shaping Collections: Gender and Value
13
‘No entiende en el Balor de los libros’: the Value of Books for Women Owners in Seventeenth-Century Navarre Alexandra Wingate
14
The ‘Librara’, a Female Librarian in Seventeenth-Century Genoese Nunneries Valentina Sonzini
15
Between Piety and Scholarship: the Bible Collection of Elisabeth Sophie Marie of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel Joëlle Weis
Part 6: Crafting Identity: Religion and Gender
16
Seditious Pamphlets ‘Mid-wifed into the World’: Gender and the Confederate Stationers’ Clandestine Publishing Business in Restoration England Verônica Calsoni Lima
17
Printing Prophecy before 1550: Fame, Piety, and Gender in Northern Europe Rabia Gregory
18
Learning Your Papist ABCs: Gendered Instruction and Printed Books in Clandestine Catholic Schools in the Dutch Republic Elise Watson
Part 7: Gendered Perception and Reality
19
The Keys to the Forbidden Books: the Duchess of Almodóvar and Her Libraries Laura Guinot Ferri
20
Lace, Letters, and the Calligraphic Manuscripts of Esther Inglis Georgianna Ziegler
21
Rare Books and Rarer Personalities: Belle da Costa Greene, Wilfrid Michael Voynich, and Stylised Gender Performance in the Rare Book Trade, c.1890–1930 Natalia Fantetti
22
Neither Radical nor Domestic: Women of the Bindery Local No. 125 of San Francisco 1902–1917 Susan McElrath
Part 8: Towards Inclusive Histories
23
Women, Wills, and the Early London Book Trade (1557–1666) Kirk Melnikoff
24
‘Come Buy This Book of Me’: Commodifying Difference in the Marketing of British Books, 1750–1830 Kate Ozment and Kandice Sharren
25
Affective Bibliography: Three Queer Approaches to Print Malcolm Noble
Index
This book will appeal to historians, literary scholars, scholars of gender and queer theory, undergraduate and postgraduate students, and anyone with an interest in gender or the history of the book. Keywords: gender history; women's history; book history; bibliography; publishing history; queer theory; labour history.