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Woude, Corrie-Christine van der "Veilingcatalogi als bron voor boekhistorisch onderzoek." Documentatieblad Werkgroep achttiende eeuw, 23 (1991), 47-57.

Woudhuysen, R. R. "Dr. Johnson's Books." TLS (July 6, 1990), 728.

Wrage, Henning. “Jene Fabrik der Büche: Über Lesesucht, ein Phantasma des medialen Ursprungs und die Kinder- und Jugendliteratur der Aufklärung.” Monatshefte, 102, no. 1 (Spring 2010), 1-21. [On the debate over reading addiction in the second half of the eighteenth century, comparing such to the contemporary concern over youth addicted to electronic media.]

Wright, C. J. (ed.). Sir Robert Cotton as Collector: Essays on an Early Stuart Courtier and his Legacy. London: British Library, 1997. Pp. viii + 470; illus.

Wright, Constance S. “On the Eighteenth-Century Ownership of a MS of Chaucer’s Legend of Good Women.” Studies in Bibliography, 40 (1987), 70-71.

Wright, Gillian. “’Delight in Good Books’: Family, Devotional Practice, and Textual Circulation in Sarah Savage’s Diaries,: Book History, 18 (2015), 48-74; summary. [Savage (1664-1754), of a nonconformist family in Cheshire, kept her diary for sixty years.]

Wright, Gillian. “Women Reading Epictetus.” Women’s Writing, 14 (2007), 321-27.

Wroth, Celestina. "'To Root the Old Woman out of Our Minds': Women Educationists and Plebian Culture in Late-Eighteenth-Century Britain." Eighteenth-Century Life, 30, no. 2 (2006), 48-73.

Wu, Duncan. "Coleridge's Great Circulating Library: A Footnote." Notes and Queries, n.s. 40 (1993), 470.

Wu, Duncan. Wordsworth's Reading, 1770-1799. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge U. Press, 1993. Pp. xviii + 220; appendices; bibliography; index. [Catalogues 272 books read and 27 others probably read by Wordsworth probably before age 30, arranged alphabetically by author and by the titles of anonymous works, providing in appendices lists of books purchased for him, his college examinations, and books borrowed from Bristol Libraries by Coleridge and Joseph Cottle. Rev. by J. H. Alexander in Analytical and Enumerative Bibliography, n.s. 7 (1993), 266-68; (favorably) by John Beer in Review of English Studies, 46, no. 182 (1995), 282-84; (favorably) by W. W. Heath in Choice, 31 (1993), 607; (favorably) by T. H. Howard-Hill in Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 87 (1993), 279-80; by Thomas Wortham in Nineteenth-Century Literature, 48 (1993), 285; in TLS (April 9, 1993), 29.

Wu, Duncan. Wordsworth's Reading, 1800-1815. Cambridge: Cambridge U. Press, 1996. Pp. xxix + 307.

Würtemberger, Thomas. "L'histoire des bibliothèques des juristes comme élement d'une histoire du droit et du savoir." Sources travaux historiques, 41/42 (1995), 89-101.

Wyn, James E. “Cushions, Copy-Books and Computers: Ann Griffiths (1776-1805), Her Hymns and Letters and Their Transmission.” Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester, 90, 2 (2014), 163-83; summary. [Treats the Welsh author Ann Thomas Griffiths and a related digitization project. In a special issue on “Writ from the Heart? Women’s Life Writing in the Long Eighteenth Century,” edited by Jacqueline Pearson.]

Wyss, Hilary E. “Beyond the Printed Word: Native Women’s Literacy Practices in Colonial New England.” Pp. 118-36 in Cultural Narratives: Textuality and Performance in American Culture before 1900. Edited by Sandra M. Gustafson and Caroline F. Sloat. Notre Dame, IN: Notre Dame U. Press, 2010. Pp. vi + 393.

Wyss, Hilary E. English Letters and Indian Literacies: Reading, Writing, and New England Missionary Schools, 1750-1830. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2012. Pp. xii + 251; illustrations. Rev. by Joanna Brooks in a review essays (“Learning to Read--Almost: New Books in Early Native American Studies”) in Early American Literature, 48 (2013), 743-54; by (favorably) by Nancy B. DuPree in SHARP News, 22, no. 1 (Winter 2013), 9-10; by Drew Lopenzina in American Quarterly, 66 (2014), 223-26; by Siobhan Senier in Resources for American Literary Studies, 37 (2014), 299-302.]

Wyss, Hilary E. Writing Indians: Literacy, Christianity, and Native Community in Early America. Boston: U. of Massachusetts Press, 2000. Pp. xiii + 207; index. [Rev. by Scott Andrews in American Literature, 74 (2002), 140-42; by Lion G. Miles in New England Quarterly, 73, no. 4 (2000), 666-69; by Philip H. Round in Early American Literature, 40, no. 2 (2005), 375-85; by Gordon Sayre in Early American Literature, 38, no. 3 (2003), 495-504; by Tammy Schneider in Studies in American Indian Literatures, 13, nos. 2-3 (2001), 110-14; by Cheryl Walker in American Studies, 42, no. 2 (2001).

Yale, Elizabeth. “The History of Archives: State of the Discipline.” Book History, 18 (2015), 302-31; summary.

Yamamoto-Wilson, John R. “The Protestant Reception of Catholic Devotional Literature in England to 1700.” British Catholic History, 32, no. 1 (May 2014), 67-90. [Since 1957 and until this number, the journal was entitled “Recusant History.”]

Yamazaki, K. "La bibliothèque d'un érudit toulousain du XVIIIe siècle, l'abbé Magi." Annales du Midi, 109 (1997), 33-51.

Yeatman, Joseph Lawrence. “Literary Culture and the Role of Libraries in Democratic America: Baltimore, 1815-1840.” Journal of Library History, 20, no. 4 (1985), 345-67.

Yeo, Matthew. The Acquisition of Books by Chetham’s Library, 1655-1700. (Library of the Written Word.) Leiden: Brill, 2011. . Pp. xiv + [6] + 263; bibliogaphy; 17 illustrations; index; tables. [Revision of a 2009 dissertation at the University of Manchester focusing on how books were acquired, the agents involved (such as the Robert Littlebury in London), and the books themselves (many were second-hand books and most fit into one of three categories: theology; classics, history, and law, and natural philosophy). Chetham’s Library was founded in 1655 by the bequest of Manchester merchant Humphry Chetham. Rev. (favorably) by David McKitterick in Book Collector, 61 (2012), 488-89; (favorably) by Adam Mosley in Library, 7th series, 13 (2011), 212-13; by Philip S. Palmer in Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 109, no. 3 (September 2015), 425-28.

Yeo, Richard. “Loose Notes and Capacious Memory: Robert Boyle’s Note-Taking and Its Rationale.” Intellectual History Review, 20 (2010), 3335-54. [In a special issue on note-taking with an introduction by Yeo (301-02) and essays by Ann Blair, Marie-Noelle Bourguet, Paul Nelles, Margarey Sankey, and Jacob Soll.]

Yeo, Richard. “A Solution to the Multitude of Books: Ephraim Chambers’s Cyclopaedia (1728) as ‘the best Book in the University.’” Journal of the History of Ideas, 64, no. 1 (2003), 61-72. [In an special section on “Early Modern Information Overload,” edited by Daniel Rosenberg.]

Young, Arthur P. (comp.). American Library History: A Bibliography of Dissertations and Theses. 3rd ed. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1988. Pp. x + 469. [Rev by Donald G. Davis, Jr., in Libraries & Culture, 24 (1989), 236-37.]

Young, Paul J. Seducing the Eighteenth-Century French Reader: Reading, Writing, and the Question of Pleasure. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2008. Pp. 167. [On novels.]

Young, Percy M. “Samuel Hellier [1738-1784]: A Collector with a Purpose: Portrait of a Bibliophile, XXVII.” Book Collector, 39 (1990), 350-61; illus.

Yu, Esther. “From Judgment to Interpretation: Eighteenth-Century Critics of Milton’s Paradise Lost.” Milton Quarterly, 53 (2012), 181-202. [Principally the critics Richard Bentley and Zacahry Pearce.]

Zachs, William. "The Boswells and Platina's Lives of the Popes." Yale University Library Gazette, 70 (1996), 143-52. [On collection and dispersal of the Boswell family's library at Auchinleck.]

Zagatti, Stefan. “La rinnovata biblioteca dei cappuccini di Genova.” Pp. 23-26 in La Biblioteca dei Cappuccini: Manoscritti, incunaboli, cinquecentine e preziose edizioni a stampa. Edited by Stefan Zagatti and Francesca Nepori Genova: San Georgio, 2010.

Zagatti, Stefan, and Francesca Nepori (eds.). La Biblioteca dei Cappuccini: Manoscritti, incunaboli, cinquecentine e preziose edizioni a stampa. Genova: San Georgio, 2010. Pp. 90; illustrations. [Includes Anna Giulia Cavagna’s “Libri dei RR.PP. Cappuccini della Provincia di Genova” (35-54); Cassiano Carpaneto’s “La biblioteca dei cappuccini di Genova e alcuni suoi bibliotecari” (14-22); Vittorio Casalino’s “Il libro e la cultura nell’esperienza francescana” (9-13); Franco Caroselli’s “La legatura e i Cappuccini” (55-60); Francesca Nepori’s “Una biblioteca itinerante” (27-33); and Zagatti’s “La rinnovata biblioteca dei cappuccini di Genova” (23-26).]

Zamboni, Aniello. Biblioteche private di Comacchio, Secoli XVI-XIX. Ferrara: Este Edition, 2009. Pp. 424; illustrations.[Includes accounts of at least six libraries, including Giovanni Nicola Figli (1716-1781) and the Convent of the Frati Cappuchini (1575-1860). Rev. by Anna Giulia Cavagna in Il Bibliotecario, 3rd series, 2011, nos. 1-2 (January-August, 2011).]

Zammit, William. “’Notizie sopra l’origine ed avanzi della Biblioteca della Sagra Religione Gerosolimitana’: An Unknown Work by Angius de Soldanis.” Bibliothecae.it, 2, no. 1 (2013), 149-84. [On the formation of the first public library in Malta in the eighteenth century.]

Zammit, William. Printing in Malta, 1642-1839: Its Cultural Rose from Inception to the Granting of Freedom of the Press. Gudja: Gutenberg Press, 2008. Pp. xxix + 423; bibliography. [Rev. (favorably) by J. F. Coakley in Library, 7th series, 10 (2009), 323-25.]

Zamora Vincente, Alonso, and the Real Academia Española. Historia de la Real Academia Española. Madrid: Espasa, 1999. Pp. 659; illus. (chiefly in color); index.

Zapata Aguilar, Gerado. Bibliotecas antiguas de Nuevo León. Monterrey: U. Autónoma de Nuevo León, 1996. Pp. 195.

Zarzebski, Tadeusz. "Biblioteka Rzeczypospolitej Załuskich zwana: Fakty z dziejow." Rocznik Biblioteki Narodowej, 27/28 (1991/92). [Reprinted as an 18-p. pamphlet by the Biblioteca Narodowa in 1994.]

Zaunstöck, Holger. "Schullehrerlesegesellschaften im mitteldeutschen Raum am Ende des 18. Jahrhunderts." Mitteldeutsches Jahrbuch für Kultur und Geschichte, 2 (1995), 127-36; illus.

Zavala, Iris M. “Textual Pluralities: Reading and Readers of Eighteenth-Century Discourse.” Translated by Colleen Donagher. Pp. 245-65 in The Institutionalization of Literature in Spain. Edited by Wald Godzich and Nicholas Spadaccini. Minneapolis: Prisma, 1987. Pp. 275.

Zavala, Lauro. De la investigación al libro: Estudios y crónicas de bibliofilia. (Colección Biblioteca del Edito.) Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autonoma de México, 2007. Pp. 168; bibliography; illus.

Zawisza, Elzbieta. Powiesc w kulturze czytelniczej Francji XVIII wieku. Wroclaw: Wydaw. Uniwersytetu Wroclawskiego, 1993. Pp. 194; illustrations. [A new edition of a study of books, publishers, and readers in eighteenth-century France first published in 1988 within series Acta Universitatis Wratislaviensis (as no. 915).]

Zbikowska-Migon, Anna. Dzieje ksiazki i jej funkcji spolecznej: wiek XVIII. [History of Books and their Social Function: Eighteenth Century]. Cracow: Wydawnictwo U. Wroclawskiego, 1987. Pp. 129; bibliography; illus. [On eighteenth century book readers, publishers, and printers; on the book trade and library history.]

Zbikowska-Migon, Anna. "Refleksje o lekturze na lamach slaskich czasopism oswieceniowych." Biuletyn Biblioteki Jagiellonskiej (1994), 165-74.

Zboray, Ronald J., and Mary Saracino Zboray. Everyday Ideas: Socioliterary Experience among Antebellum New Englanders. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 2006. [Winner of the Best Book Prize in Journalism and Mass Communication History for 2006, from the History Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. From a study of the letters and diaries of roughly a thousand New Englanders, the Zborays generalize about the distribution of texts, reading, and writing.]

Zboray, Ronald J., and Mary Saracino Zboray. “Is It a Diary, Commonplace Book, Scrapbook, or Whatchamacallit? Six Years of Exploration in New England’s Manuscript Archives.” Libraries and the Cultural Record, 44, no. 1 (2009), 101-23; summary.

Zedinger, Renate. “’Heimkehr’ nach mehr als 200 Jahren: Bericht zur Neuordnung der Bibliothek des Fürsten Georg Adam Starhemberg in Schloss Erlaa in den Jahren 1796-1797.” Mitteilungen der Gesellschaft für Buchforschung in Österreich, 2011, no. 2 (2011), 59-70.

Zehnacker, Françoise. "Le Cabinet de curiosités de la bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève." Bulletin du bibliophile (1990), 148-58.

Zehnacker, Françoise, and Nicolas Petit. "Histoire des fonds anciens de la Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève." Mélanges de la Bibliothèque de la Sorbonne, 11 (1991), 81-101.

Žibritová, Gabriela. “Citatelia ‘slovenskych’ textov v Uhorsku 17. storocia” [Readers of ‘Slovak Texts’ in Hungary in the 17th Century]. Studia Bibliograhica Posoniensi (Slovak ejournal from Bratislava), 2012 (2012), 52-63. [English translation of title from the author’s summary. In 17th-century Slovakia, books were read in Latin, German, Hungarian, Slovakian (language of the people), and Czech (language of printed texts).]

Žibritová, Gabriela. “Katalógy knižníc ako prameň vo výskume dejín knižnej kultúry: Možnosti a obmedzenia (Šlachtická knižnica Ostrožičovcov z Ilavy (1647, 1677)” [Library catalogues as a source in the research of book culture history: Possibilities and limitations (The noble library of the Ostrozics from Ilava (1647, 1677)]. Studia Bibliograhica Posoniensi [Slovak e-journal from Bratislava], 2014 (2014), 26-41; illustrations; English summary. [English title from the author. Two catalogues dated 1647 and 1677 exist from a non-extant family library, listing many Slovak and Czech printings.]

Zikowska-Migon, Anna. "Refleksje o lekturze na lamach slaskich czasopism oswieceniowych." Biuletyn Biblioteki Jagiellonskiej (1994), 165-74.

Zito, Paola. L’esagono imperfetto: I libri proibiti della Biblioteca Brancacciana secondo l’inventario del 1730 circa. (Altera, 30.) Pisa: Fabrizio Serra Editore, 2012. Pp. 201. [Rev. by Rudj Gorian in L’Almanacco bibliografico, no. 25 (March 2013), 31.]

Zorzi, Marino. “Le Biblioteche veneziane, espressione di una singolare cività.” The Books of Venice / Il Libro veneziano. (Miscellanea marciana, 20.) Edited by Craig Kallendorf and Lisa Pon. Venice: Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana; and La Musa Talia; New Castle: Oak Knoll Press, 2008. Pp. xii + 619; illus.

Zurlini, Fabiola. “Antonio Cocchi, medico, bibliotecario e bibliografo del secolo XVIII (Parte prima)”; “_____ (Parte II).” Culture del testo e del documento, 3 [collective issue no. 8] (May-August), 99-?; 3 [no. 9] (Sept.-Dec. 2002), 69-86.

Zurlini, Fabiola (comp.). La "Libraria" Spezioli: Il catalogo autografo tra bibliografia e sapere medico neu secoli XVII e XVIII. Macerata: Universitá degli Studi di Macerata, 2003.

Zurlini, Fabiola. “The Physician Romolo Spezioli (1642-1723) and his Private Library in the Public Library of Fermo.” Versalius, 10, no. 11 (2004), 61-66; illus. [By the curator of the Public Library of Fermo and cataloguer of the collection, which includes nearly 12,000 16C-early 18C vols. of this distinguished physician’s library, stored in its Globe Room. Spezioli was physician to such notables as Pope Alexander VIII and Queen Christina of Sweden.]

Zvara, Edina. “Ismert könyvgyütök tulajdonosi bejegyzései az Esterházy-könyvtárban.” Magyar Könyvszemle, 127 (2011), 47-71; summary in French. [“Notes de possesseurs de collectionneurs connus dans la bibliothèque Esterházy,” who would be Miklós Esterházy (1583-1645), Palatine of Hungary, and his son Pál Esterházy (1635-1713), books from which end up at a Franciscan monastery.]



Zytaruk, Maria. "'Occasional Specimens, not Compleate Systemes': John Evelyn's Culture of Collecting." Bodleian Library Record, 17, nos. 3-4 (April-October 2001), 185-212. [Part of a collection on "Cultures of Collecting in Oxford Libraries and Beyond," with introduction by Kate Bennett.]
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