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Call for Papers

 

The Profession of the Print Publisher in the long 16th century

 

Session at the Annual Meeting of The Sixteenth Century Society & Conference
(SCSC), 1-4 Noember 2018, Albuquerque NM

 

Session co-sponsored by the Association of Print Scholars (APS)

 

One of the most revolutionary changes to the field of printmaking over the
course of the long sixteenth century was the growing role and influence of
the print publisher. While still a rare, or almost undocumented phenomenon
around 1500, by the turn of the following century the print market was
largely controlled by individual entrepreneurs and well-established
publishing firms. The business of print production necessitated new
structures of organization, a division of labor and the creation of sales
and marketing techniques that profoundly influenced choices of style,
technique, subject matter and formatting, as well as taste and collecting
practices.

 

While neglected in early print scholarship in favor of the artistic
contributions of the inventor and or printmaker, in recent years much new
information about the role of the publisher has come to light through
conferences, exhibitions and publications. Much of this work is (by
necessity) of monographic nature, focusing on individual publishers and
their output. This session seeks to highlight in particular new research
that further elucidates the wide-ranging functions performed by the
early-modern print publisher, and through a combination of papers expand our
comprehension of the local, national and transnational influence of this new
profession on the print market.

 

Papers are encouraged to focus on:

 

-    Early print publishers and entrepreneurs     

-    Specialized publishers

-    Publishers commissioning prints 

-    Working relationships between publishers and printmakers

-    (Exclusive) Collaborations with individual artists

-    Publishers shaping the print market / collecting practices

-    Publishers influencing format / specialized subject matter

-    Publishers sourcing prints from elsewhere

-    Networks of Print Publishers

-    Rivalry and Competition between Print Publishers

-    Selling techniques

-    A Publishers Print stock and stock lists

 

Please submit an abstract (max. 200 words) and a brief bio (not to exceed
300 words) to Femke Speelberg ([log in to unmask]
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> ) by March 15, 2018. Papers will be
chosen for one or possibly two sessions to be held during the annual meeting
of the Sixteenth Century Society in Albuquerque, New Mexico. You will
receive notification from the conveners by April 2, 2018.

 

 

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