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Hudi, József. Könyv és társadalom: Könyvkultúra és müvelödés a XVIII-XIX. századi Veszprém megyében. (Nemzeti Téka.) Budapest: Országos Széchényi Könyvtár; Godolat, 2009. Pp. 276; illustrations. [Rev. by Eszter Deák in Magyar Könyvszemle, 126 (2010), 536-39; Ilona Pavercsik in Korall: Társadalomtörténeti Folyóirat, no. 43 (2011), 196-203.]

Hughes, Gillian. “Hogg’s Personal Library.” Studies in Hogg and His World, 19 (2008), 32-65.

Huisman, Gerda C. “Inservio studiis a Dorth Versaliensis: The Many Uses of a Seventeenth-Century Book Sales Catalogue.” Quærendo, 41 (2011), 276-85. [A seventeenth-century Groningen student used an Amsterdam bookdealer’s catalogue for such uses as a bibliographical inventory, bibliographical manual, a comparative price list, and a wish list.]

Hüllen, Werner, Friederike Klippel, and Sabine Doff. Sprachen der Bildung: Bildung durch Sprachen im Deutschland des 18. und 19. Jahrhunderts. (Wolfenbütteler Forschungen, 107.) Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz in Kommission, 2005. Pp. 316. [On studying and teaching languages in 18th- and 19th-century Germany.]

Hummel, Pascale. Histoire de l'histoire de la philologie: Étude d'un genre épistémologique et bibliographique. (Histoire des idées et critique littéraire, 385.) Geneva: Droz, 2000. Pp. 504; indices.

Hundert, Gershon David. "The Library of the Study Hall in Volozhin, 1762: Some Notes on the Basis of a Newly Discovered Manuscript." Jewish History, 14 (2000), 225-44.

Hunt, Arnold. “The Sale of Richard Heber’s Library.” Pp. 143-71 of Under the Hammer: Book Auctions since the Seventeenth Century. (Publishing Pathways.) Edited by Robin Meyers, Michael Harris, and Giles Mandelbrote. London: BL; New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll, 2001. Pp. xiv + 242.

Hunt, Lynn (ed.). The Invention of Pornography, Obscenity, and the Origins of Modernity, 1500-1800. New York: Zone Books (distributed through Cambridge, MA: MIT Press), 1993. Pp. 411; illus.; index. [Revised papers of a conference on "The Invention of Pornography" (University of Pennsylvania, 1991). Includes Lynn Hunt's introduction (9-45); Joan DeJean's "The Politics of Pornography: L'Ecole des Filles" (109-123); and Rachel Weil's "Sometimes a Scepter Is Only a Scepter: Pornography and Politics in Restoration England" (124-53); Margaret C. Jacob's "The Materialist World of Pornography" (157-202), and Lucienne Frappier-Mazur's "Truth and the Obscene Word in Eighteenth-Century French Pornography" (203-21); Kathryn Norberg's "The Libertine Whore: Prostitution in French Pornography from Margot to Juliette" (225-52), Randolph Trumbach's "Erotic Fantasy and Male Libertinism in Enlightenment England" (253-82); Wijnand W. Mijnhardt's "Politics and Pornography in the Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Dutch Republic" (283-300), and Lynn Hunt's "Pornography and the French Revolution" (301-39).

Hunter, David (ed.). Music Publishing and Collecting: Essays in Honour of Donald W. Krummel. Champaigne, IL: Graduate School of Library and Information Science, U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1994. Pp. xv + 252; illus. [Includes several relevant essays including Peggy Daub's "Queen Caroline of England's Music Library" (131-66); James J. Fuld and David Hunter's "Collectors and Music Bibliography: A Preliminary Survey" (215-34); and Richard Macnutt's "Early Acquisitions for the Paris Conservatoire Library: Rudolphe Kreuzer's Role in Obtaining Materials from Italy, 1796-1802" (167-88).]

Hunter, Michael (ed.). Archives of the Scientific Revolution: The Formation and Exchange of Ideas in Seventeenth-Century Europe. Woodbridge, U.K.: Boydell Press, 1998. Pp. xiii + 216; illus.; index; maps. [Rev. by Renzo Baldasso in Seventeenth-Century News, 58 (2000), 1-15; by D. Chambers in University of Toronto Quarterly, 69 (2000), 15-18; (fav.) by Sachiko Kusukawa in The Seventeenth Century, 15 (2000), 286-87; by R. A. Mentzer, Jr., in Historical Journal, 43 (2000), 295-302; by A. E. Shapiro in Isis, 90 (1999), 804.

Hunter, Michael. "Transmitting to Posterity: The Miraculous Intactness of Samuel Pepys's Library." TLS (Dec. 30, 1994), 13. [Review article on the completion of the multi-volume Catalogue of the Pepys Library.]

Hunter, Michael, Giles Mandelbrote, Richard Ovenden, and Nigel Smith (eds.). A Radical's Books: The Library Catalogue of Samuel Jeake of Rye, 1623-1690. Woodbridge, Suffolk, U.K.: Boydel & Brewer; Rochester, NY: D. S. Brewer, 1999. Pp. lxxiv + 364; appendices; bibliographical catalogue of books noting annotations; illus.; index. [Rev. (fav.) by Maureen Bell in SHARP News, 10, no. 1 (Winter 2000-2001), 13-14; by Paul Grinke in Book Collector, 49 (2000), 304-06; (fav.) by T. H. Howard-Hill in PBSA, 93 (1999), 536; (fav.) by C. M. Purcell in Library History, 16 (2000), 77-78; (fav.) by Hermann J. Real in ECCB, n.s. 26 (for 2000 [2004], 72-74.]

Hurel, Daniel-Odon. "Des usages des bibliothèques chez les Bénédictins de la Congrégation de St Maur (XVIIe-XVIIIe siècle)." Sources travaux historiques, 41/42 (1995), 79-88.

Hurel, Daniel-Odon. "Les mauristes de Bonne-Nouvelle d'Orléans et leur bibliothèque au XVIIIe siècle." Revue d'histoire de l'Eglise de France, 83 (1997), 179-201; illus.

Hurel, Daniel-Odon, and Gérard Laudin (eds.). Académies et sociétes savantes en Europe (1650-1800). Paris: Champion; Geneva: Slatkine, 2000. Pp. 511; illus. [Rev. by Josée S. J. Lauersdorf in French Review, 77 (2004), 1259-60.]

Hutchins, Zachary. “Who Reads an Early American Sermon?” [review essay]. Early American Literature, 49 (2014), 517-32.

Hynes, Peter John. “Models of Reading in the Eighteenth-Century Epistolary Novel.” Ph.D. dissertation, University of Toronto, 1986. Dissertation Abstracts International, 47A, no. 12 (1987), 4404-05.

Icimzoy, A. Oguz, and Ismail E. Erünsal. “The Legacy of the Ottoman Library in the Libraries of the Turkish Republic.” Libri, 58 (March 2008), 47-57.

Ignasiak, Detlef. Klassik in Weimar and Jena: Ein Lesebuch 1772-1785. (Illustrierte Klassiker-Bibliothek, 3.) Bucha b Jena: Quartus-Verlag, 2002. Pp. 271; illus. [Fiction.]

Imanska, Iwona. "Biblioteki mieszczan elblaskich [tail moves to right under a] w XVIII wieku." Acta Universitatis Nicolai Copernici Historia, 28 (1993), 149-60.

Imanska, Iwona. "Rola ksiazki w okresie wczenego oswiecenia na przkladzie Prus Królewskich." [The role of the book at the start of the Enlightenment: The example of the Polish Royal Prussia.] Roczniki Biblioteczne, 38 (1994), 97-109.

Infantes, Victor, François Lopez, and Jean-François Botrel (eds.). Historia de la edición y de la lectura en España, 1472-1914. Madrid: Fundación Germán Sánchez Ruipérez, 2003. Pp. 860; illus. [Called "A ground-breaking history of publishing and reading" by The Library, 5 (2004), 220. Rev. (fav.) by Craig Kallendorf in review essay ("The History of Printing and Reading in Spain") in Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 99 (2005), 309-15.]

Infelise, Mario. "L'utile e il piacevole: Alla ricerca dei lettori italiani del Secondo Settecento." Pp. 113-26 in Gli spazi del libro nell'Europa del XVIII secolo: Atti del Convegno di Ravenna: 15-16 dicembre 1995. (Emilia Romagna, Biblioteche archivi, 35.) Edited by Maria Gioia Tavoni and Françoise Waquet. Bologna: Pàtron, 1997. Pp. 333; illus; index.

Imhof, Dirk. “From a Library for Proof-Readers to a Bibliophile Treasury: The Library of the Plantin-Moretus Museum in Antwerp.” Arts Libraries Journal, 33, no. 3 (2008), 34-38.

Irigoin, Jean. "En guise d'introduction: Le livre grec et l'Europe (XVe-XVIIIe siècle)." Revue française d'histoire du livre, nos. 98-99 (1998), 9-20. [Irigoin here introduces a special issue entitled Le Livre Grec et l'Europe: Du modèle antique à la diffusion des Lumières of RFHL, edited by Irigoin, with six essays (9-138), a report by Frédéric Barbier's on a colloquium ("Autour d'Adamantos Coray: Le colloque de Montpellier [20-21 mars 1998]," 139-40), and three book reviews, including one of Il libro nel bacino adriatico (secc. XV-XVIII), ed. by Sante Graciotti (1992). Two of the essays are relevant here: Michel Espagne's "Winckelmann, L'Allemagne et la Grèce" (89-110) and Frédéric Barbier's "Vienne et la Grèce: Notes de lecture" (111-38).]

Isaac, Marie-Thérèse (ed.). La Bibliothèque de l'Université de Mons-Hainaut: 1797-1997. Mons-Hainaut, Belgium: U. de Mons-Hainaut, 1997. Pp. 253; illus. (some in color).

Isaac, Marie-Thérèse (ed.). École centrale du départment de Jemappes: Les programmes des exercices publics de l'an VII à l'an X (1798-1802). Mons: Société des Bibliophiles belges séant à Mons, 2004. Pp. 223. [Rev. (with another book) by C.G. in Livre et l'estampe, no. 164 (2005), 162-63.]

Isaac, Marie-Thérèse. “Les Livres manuscrits de l’abbaye des Dunes d’après le catalogue du XVIIe siècle.” Scriptorium, 37, no. 1 (1983), 129-33.

Isaac, Marie-Thérèse (ed.). Sciences et Lumières à Mons, 1792-1802. (Classe des Sciences, 3rd series, 6.) Brussels: Académie royale de Belgique, 2004. Pp. 416; illus.; index. [Rev. (with another book) by C.G. in Livre et l'estampe, no. 164 (2005), 162-63.]

Isaac, Marie-Thérèse, and Claude Sorgeloos. L'École centrale du départment de Jemappes: Enseignement, livres, et lumières à Mons. (Archives et bibliothèques de Belgique, 73.) Brussels: Bibliothèque royale de Belgique, 2004. Pp. 589.

Isaac, Peter, and Barry McKay (eds.). The Human Face of the Book Trade: Print Culture and Its Creators. (Print Networks, 3.) New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll Books; Winchester, U.K.: St. Paul's Bibliographies, 1999. Pp. x + 228; illus.; index. [Relevant essays include David Stoker's "The Country Book Trade 1784-85" (13-28); Stephen W. Brown's "William Smellie and the Printer's Role in the Eighteenth-Century Edinburgh Book Trade" (29-44); Richard B. Sher's "William Buchan's Domestic Medicine: Laying Book History Open" (45-64); Warren McDougall's "Charles Elliot and the London Booksellers in the Early Years" (81-96); Michael Powell and Terry Wyke's "At the Fall of the Hammer: Auctioning Books in Manchester 1700-1850" (171-90); and Graeme S. Forbes's "The Edward Clark Collection at Napier University Library, Edinburgh" (207-18).]

Isaac, Peter, and Barry McKay (eds.). The Reach of Print: Making, Selling, and Using Books. Winchester, U.K.: St. Paul's Bibliographies; New Castle, DE: Oak Knoll, 1998. Pp. x + 228; illus.; index. [Essays focused on libraries and reading include Iain Beavan's "'The best Library that ever the North Pairtes of Scotland Saw': Thomas Reid and his Books"; R. J. Goulden's "Print Culture in the Kentish Weald"; and Sheila Hingley's "Elham Parish Library" (175-90); and Michael Perkin's "Parochial Libraries: Founders and Readers." Rev. by Martin Holmes in Libraries and Culture, 35 (2000), 584-85.]

Ito, Akiyo. "Olaudah Equiano and the New York Artisans: The First American Edition of The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African." Early American Literature, 32 (1997), 82-101. [With appended list of subscribers to the first American edition (New York, 1791).]

Iuozzo, Carmine. La Biblioteca del Fondo Edifici di Culto: Catalogo delle monografie antiche, 1552-1830. Preface by Giovanni Solimine. Rome: L’Erma di Breschneider, 2009. Pp. 286.

Iyeiri, Yoko, Jennifer Smith, and Jonathan Hope. “Additional Eighteenth-Century Materials on Middle English in the Hunterian Collection of the Glasgow University Library.” Notes and Queries, 59 (2012), 332-35. [Adds to those at Glasgow already noted several anonymous manuscript grammars linked to medieval texts.]



Jaarboek voor Nederlandse Boekgechiedenis. Volume 20: 2013. Nijmegen: Uitgeverij Vantilt, 2013. Pp. 224; illustrations. [This year’s volume surveys book history research throughout the world, with contributions by distinguished experts. The contents include: David McKitterick, “The United Kingdom: A National History of the Book”; Frederick Nesta, “The Book in China and Modern Western Book History”; Christine  Haug, Slávka Rude-Porubská, and Wolfgang Schmitz, “‘Buchwissenschaft’ in Germany. An Overview”;  Peter R. Frank, Johannes Frimmel, and Murray G. Hall, “Book History in Austria”; Benito Rial Costas, “Bibliography and the History of the Printed Book in Spain: Some insights into an Old and New Field of Study”; Stijn van Rossem, “Book history in Belgium: Who Harbours the Harbourless?”; Rikard Wingård, “Swedish Book Historical Research 2006-2012: A Survey”; Peter Kornicki, “Recent Work on the History of the Book in Japan”; Aina Nøding, “Book History in Norway. From Peasant Readers to Reading Ibsen”; Anders Toftgaard, “Princely Libraries, the Readings of Common Man and the Entry of the Book Cover into Literary Studies. Trends in Book History Research in Denmark”; César Manrique Figueroa, “Studying the Book in Hispanic America: The Process of Consolidation of National Identities”; Adriaan van der Weel, “Pandora’s Box of Text Technology”; Jos A.A.M. Biemans, “Book History and Manuscript Studies at the University of Amsterdam: A Personal Story”; and several less relevant essays.]

Jack, Belinda. The Woman Reader. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2012. Pp. 344. [Surveys women’s reading and reactions to such from ancient to modern times. Rev. by Frances Wilson in Times Literary Supplement (19 October 2012), 30.]

Jackson, Deirdre. “Humfrey Wanley and the Harley Collection.” Electronic British Library Journal (2011), article 2. PDF. . [Wanley (1672-1726) was an Anglo-Saxonist who catalogued the Harleys’ books and manuscripts; this article also attends to his interest in illuminated manuscripts.]

Jackson, Ian. "Approaches to the History of Readers and Reading in Eighteenth-Century Britain." Historical Journal, 47 (2004), 1041-54.

Jackson, H[eather J]. “Coleridge as Reader: Maginalia.” Pp. 271-87 of The Oxford Handbook of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Ed. by Frederick Burwick. Oxford: Oxford U. Press, 2009.

Jackson, H. J. Marginalia: Readers Writing in Books. New Haven, CT: Yale U. Press, 2001. Pp. viii + 324; 10 illus. [Rev. by Luigi Balsamo in La Bibliofilía, 105 (2003), 215-16; by Nicolas Barker] in rev. essay ("Marginalia") in Book Collector, 52 (2003), 11-30; (fav.). by Jeffrey Garrett in College and Research Libraries, 63 (2002), 292-94; by David C. Greetham in Papers of the Bibliographical Society of Canada, 40, no. 1 (Spring 2002), 61-73; (with other books) by Bruce Whiteman in Eighteenth-Century Studies, 38 (2005), 333-36.]

Jackson, H. J. Romantic Readers: The Evidence of Marginalia. New Haven: Yale U. Press, 2005. Pp. xvii + 366; bibliographies (of books with manuscript notes, pp. 325-39; of secondary sources, pp. 340-52); 30 illus.; index. [On early 19th-century readers and their marginalia, with an introduction entitled "The Reading Environment," a conclusion, and four chapters: "Mundane Marginalia"; "Socializing with Books"; "Custodians to Posterity"; and "The Reading Mind." Rev. (fav.) by Emily Smith in Eighteenth-Century Intelligencer, 21, no. 3 (September 2007), 38-41.]

Jackson, Mary. "Literacy, Audience, and Marketing in Eighteenth-Century British Children's Literature." East-Central Intelligencer [Newsletter of the East-Central American Society for 18th-Century Studies], n.s. 3 (May 1989), 7-10.

Jacob, W. M. “Parochial Libraries and their Users.” Library & Information History, 27 (2011), 211-16.

Jacobs, Deborah. "Göttingen and the Great Circle of German Libraries: A Comprehensive Continental Review of Eighteenth-Century English Culture. Studies in the Novel, 22 (1990), 82-87.

Jacobs, Edward H. Accidental Migrations: An Archaeology of Gothic Discourse. Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell U. Press; Cranbury, NJ, and London: Associated U. Presses, 2000. Pp. 295; appendix; index. [Rev. (fav.) by Devoney Looser in East-Central Intelligencer, n.s. 15, no. 2 (May 2001), 31-32; by David Walker in Modern Language Review, 98 (2003), 970-71. Particularly relevant is the final chapter, "The Gothic Library: Gothic Romances, Circulating Libraries, and the Culture of Genericism" and the appendix on the inventory of circulating libraries.]

Jacobs, Edward. "Anonymous Signatures: Circulating Libraries, Conventionality, and the Production of Gothic Romances." ELH, 62 (1995), 603-29. [Argues that a "detailed analysis of criculating-library publishing is critical to our understanding of how 'the novel' emerged and functioned as a dominant literary genre." He finds that, needing to publish cheap new talent to compete with major publishers, "circulating libraries specialized in publishing fiction by anonymous and/or female authors who were often novices" (604). See also for a related (possibly revised) discussion Jacobs' Accidental Migrations: An Archaeology of Gothic Discourse (Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell U. Press, 2000), particularly its appendices]

Jacobs, Edward H. "Buying into Classes: The Practice of Book Selection in Eighteenth-Century Britain." Eighteenth-Century Studies, 33 (1999), 43-64.

Jacobs, Edward. "A Previously Unremarked Circulating Library: John Roson and the Role of Circulating-Library Proprietors as Publishers in Eighteenth-Century Britain." Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 89 (1995), 61-71; appendix [on two novels of the 1790s not listed in the ESTC that were published by Roson and loaned by circulating libraries].

Jacobs, Edward, and Antonia Forster. “’Lost Books’ and Publishing History: Two Annotated Lists of Imprints for the Fiction Titles Listed in the Circulating Library Catalogues of Thomas Lowndes (1766) and M. Heavisides (1790), of Which No Known Copies Survive.” Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 89 (1995), 260-97.

Jaffe, Catherine [M.?]. “Suspect Pleasure: Writing the Woman Reader in Eighteenth-Century Spain.” Dieciocho, 22, no. 1 (1999), 35-59.

Jaffe, Catherine Marie. “Dona Leonora’s Library: Women’s Readings from the Spectator (1711) to El Semanario de Salamanca (1795).” Pp. 178-96 of Eve Enlightenment: Women’s Experience in Spain and Spanish America, 1726-1839. Edited by Catherine Marie Jaffe and Elizabeth Franklin Lewis. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State U. Press, 2009. Pp. 253; illus.; index.

Jaffe, Catherine M. “La ‘ilustración necesaria’ para una mujer en Las Literaturas de Dionisio Solís: Discursos de la lectura y la experiencia de la modernidad.” Pp. 873-90 in Hacia 1812 desde el siglo ilustrado. (Actas del V Congresso internacional de la Sociedad Española de Estudios de Siglo XVIII.) Edited by Fernando Durán López. Cadiz: Sociedad Española de Estudios de Siglo XVIII [SEES XVIII]; Ediciones Trea, 2013.

Jaffe, Catherine M. “Of Women’s Love, Learning, and (In)Discretion: María Lorenza de los Rios’s La sabia indiscreta (1803).” MLN, 119 (2004), 270-89.

Jaffe, Catherine M., and Elizabeth Franklin Lewis (eds.). Eve’s Enlightenment: Women’s Experience in Spain and Spanish America, 1726-1839. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2009. Pp. vi + 253; illustrations. [Includes groups of essays on “Women and the Republic of Letters,” “Women’s Lives,” and “Representations of Women.” Of special relevance are the editor’s introduction, Mónica Bolufer Peruga’s “Women of Letters in Eighteenth-Century Spain: Tradition and Modernity” (17-32); Isabel Morant Deusa’s “Reasons for Education: New Echoes of the Polemic” (51-61); and Jaffe’s “Doña Leonora’s Library: Women’s Reading from The Spectator (1711) to El Semanario de Salamanca (1795)” (178-96). Rev. (favorably) by Clorinda Donato in a review essay (“Living the Ibero American and Italian Enlightenments: Gendered Contexts, Gendered Responses”) in XVIII: New Perspectives on the Eighteenth Century, 8 (2011), 80-84; by Ana Hontanilla in ECCB, n.s. 35 (for 2009 [2013]), 392-93; by Eva Velasco Moreno in Cuadernos Dieciochistas, 12 (2011), 212-15.]

Jagodzinski, Cecile M. Privacy and Print: Reading and Writing in Seventeenth-Century England. Charlottesville, VA: U. Press of Virginia, 1999. Pp. 218; index. [Includes discussions of Margaret Cavendish and Aphra Behn with attention to privacy rights and gender.]

Jahn, Bernhard. “Haydn als Leser--oder die Grenzen der Bibliotheksforschung.” Das Achtzehnte Jahrhundert: Deutsche Gesellschaft für die Erforschung des 18. Jahrhunderts, 33, no. 2 (2009), 191-202.

Jahn, Cornelia Jahn and Dieter Kudorfer (eds.). Lebendiges Büchererbe: Säkularisation, Mediatisierung und die Bayerische Staatsbibliothek: Eine Austellung der Bayerischen Staatsbibliothek, München, 7. November 2003-30. Januar 2004. (Ausstellungskataloge, 74.) Foreword by Hermann Leskien. Munich: Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, [2003]. Pp. 239; illus. (some in color); indices. [Produced in conjunction with an exhibition on the Staatsbibliothek and library history at the library November 2003-January 2004. With contributions from roughly a dozen scholars, five by Dieter Kudorfer, including "Die Säkularisation und das Bibliothekswesen--Traditionsbruch und Neuanfang für die Wissenschaft" (9-20), "Bücherkumulation und Aufbruch der Forschung" (47-53," and the sections on "Geschichte" and "Deutsche Philologie/Sprachwissenschaft." Cornelia Jahn contributed "Mühsam enworbene Schätze--Der Ablauf der Büchersäkularisation" (21-46). Of the field surveys, Winold Vogt covers "Rechtsgeschichte"; Béatrice Hernad, "Kunstgeschichte"; Gudrun Wirtz, "Slawistik"; and Brigitte Gullath, "Mittellateinische Philologie" and "Deutsche Philologie/Literaturwissenschaft." The volume concludes with Gullath on "Methoden und Medien der Erschließung," Annemarie Kaindl on "Der Bibliotheksbau in der Ludwigstraße," and Irmhild Schäfer on "Erhaltung und Restaurierung."]

Jajdelska, Elspeth. "Income, Ideology and Childhood Reading in the Late Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth Centuries." History of Education, 33 (2004), 55-73.

Jajdelska, Elspeth. “Pepys in the History of Reading.” Historical Journal, 50, 3 (2007), 549-69.

Jajdelska, Elspeth. Silent Reading and the Birth of the Narrator. (Studies in Book and Print Culture.) Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2007. Pp. x + 222. [Rev. by Scott Paul Gordon in Library Quarterly, 80 (2010), 187-89.]

Jajdelska, Elspeth. “’The Very Defective and Erroneous Method’: Reading Instruction and Social Identity in Elite Eighteenth-Century Learners.” Oxford Review of Education, 36, no. 2 (2010), 141-56.

Jaklin, Ingeborg. Das österreichische Schulbuch im 18. Jahrhundert: Aus dem Wiener Verlag Trattner und dem Schulbuchverlag. (Buchforschung, 3.) Vienna: Praesens, 2003. Pp. 299; illus.

James, K. A. "'Humbly Dedicated': Petiver and the Audience for Natual History in Early Eighteenth-Century Britain." Archives of Natural History, 31 (2004), 318-29.

Jammers, Antonius, Dietger Pforte, Martin Hollender, and Winfried Sühlo (eds.). Die besondere Bibliothek, oder die Faszinationvon Büchersammlungen. Munich: Saur, 2002. Pp. xv + 344; illustrations (some in color). [On the history of book collecting and collections.]

Jammes, André. “De la destruction des livres.” Pp. 813-17 in Le Livre et l'historien: Études offertes en l'honneur du Professeur Henri-Jean Martin. (Histoire et civilisation du livre, 24.) Edited by Frédéric Barbier, Annie Parent-Charon, François Dupuigrenet Desroussilles, Claude Jolly, and Dominique Varry. Geneva: Droz, 1997. Pp. xvii + 817 + [7]; index.

János, Heltai. (ed.). Biblia Hungarica Philologica. Magyarországi bibliák a filológiai tudományokban. Az Országos Széchényi Könyvtárban a Biblia Sacra Hungarica [from a conference, 21 November 2008 - 29 March 2009]. Budapest: Argumentum Kiadó, 2009. Pp. 216. [Rev. by László Szelestei in Magyar Könyvszemle, 126 (2010), 424-25.]


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