Women in Print 1: Design & Identities

Caroline Archer-Parré, Malcolm Dick (Editor), Rose Roberto (Editor), Artemis Alexiou (Editor)

    Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

    Abstract

    Women in Print is a collection of essays in two related volumes which considers the diversity of roles occupied by women in the design, authorship, production, distribution and consumption of printed material from the thirteenth century onwards. Women in Print I: Design and Identities demonstrates women’s multi-layered contribution to design, printing and publishing history through eleven case studies of women artists, compositors, editors, engravers, photographers, printers, publishers, scribes, stationers, typesetters, widows in business, and writers. It offers an examination of women as active participants and contributors in the many and varied aspects of design and print culture, including the production of illustrations, typefaces, periodical layouts, photographic prints and bound volumes.Women have often participated in design and print culture throughout history, yet their impact has typically been neglected and undervalued, or deliberately obscured from historical accounts. This collection of essays covers, and recovers, the lives and work of women in print, emphasizing how their contributions brought positive change not only to the industries they contributed to, but also to the wider social and cultural settings of their time.
    Original languageEnglish
    Place of PublicationOxford
    PublisherPeter Lang AG
    Number of pages302
    Volume2
    ISBN (Print)9781789979787
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished (VoR) - 2022

    Publication series

    NamePrinting History & Culture
    PublisherPeter Lang Ltd
    Volume2

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