“Creativity and Commerce in the Age of Print”
Centre for the History of the Book
University of Edinburgh
July 26, 2014
Deadline: May 5, 2014
Hosted by the Centre for the History of the Book at the
University of Edinburgh, this interdisciplinary conference will explore the
sometimes-fraught connections between the ‘art’ and ‘trade’ of books from the Western
invention of printing to today. Are the interests of authors and publishers
always opposed, or can they lead to productive forms of collaboration? Does
work undertaken for the marketplace necessarily compromise its moral and
cultural standing? How does literature become property, and how has authorship evolved
between the starving writer of ‘Grub Street’ and the modern book festival
circuit? Can the requirements of the printing and bookselling industries
constitute a form of de-facto censorship, determining the types of work that are
published and circulated?
The organizers are currently seeking papers from postgraduate and early
career researchers interested in questions such as these, with potential topics
including (but not limited to):
- Authorship and other creative professions
- The printing and bookselling industries
- Author-publishers relationships
- Dissemination networks
- Subscription and patronage
- Book advertising, illustration
- Serial publication
- ‘Tie-ins’, merchandise, and material culture
- Libraries and book collecting
- Commerce and censorship
- Originality, copyright, and intellectual property
- Book piracy and its national boundaries
- Creative work and gender
- The impact of new technologies for production and dissemination
- The ‘rise’ or ‘death’ of print.
Proposals in all relevant subject areas and historical
periods post-1450 are welcome. Please send a 200-word abstract to
N.Simonova@ed.ac.uk by May 5, 2014. Limited travel bursaries may be available;
indicate if you would require one to attend. The conference will take place in
Edinburgh on July 26, 2014, with registration opening in June.