The topographical views of the eighteenth century lend themselves to minute exploration, especially digitised images that can be zoomed into and enlarged onscreen.
From Craft to Technology and Back Again
An Early Reference to Wayzgoose?
British and Irish Print Networks
The Easter Rising
Easter with The King James Bible, 1611
Book History Research Network Workshop
The Book of Job with Linocut Images
Salvaging the Doves Press Type
Valentine's Cards
The Winterbourne Press
The Winter Wayzgoose
The James P. Danky Fellowship
Wapping at 30
Unjustified Lines
British Women's Writing between 1930 and 1960
The period of women’s literary history between 1930 and 1960 is beginning to receive the closer attention of literary scholars, feminists and cultural historians. It is a period characterised in many ways by the prefix ‘re’; emblematic of the persistent impulse for re-evaluation of women’s writing that occupies an uncertain, liminal place in relation to the canon.
British and Irish Print Networks CFP
In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Ireland became increasingly integrated within a British economic and political space. After 1801, Ireland formed part of the United Kingdom and it supplied both food and labour power to industrialising Britain. The same pattern appears in the domain of print...