Print Culture, Agency and Regional Identity in the Handpress Era
The Print Culture, Agency and Regional Identity Research Network is currently editing a new collection of essays:
We are particularly keen to encourage dialogue between media history, book history, literary studies, cultural geography, and gender studies. By drawing on these approaches, we aim to extend book history’s engagement with the spatial turn. This collection will deepen understanding of the development of regional print cultures, highlight the agency of print personnel within that development, and interrogate the contribution that print cultures made to the formation of regional identities.
Guiding questions:
- Where were the key nodes of regional or national printing in the British Isles? What were the relationships between them: how are these imagined and articulated? How did they compete or collaborate? How did print cultures differ between them?
- Which theoretical models offer effective routes for the analysis of regional print trades?
- Regional and national news: how do the regions understand themselves in relation to local and national events? How do we characterise (e.g.) ‘Scottish News’, ‘Northern News’?
- What are the communicative norms that regional print cultures perpetuate or undermine? To what extent are communicative norms gendered in this context?
- What are the international dimensions to regional print cultures?
- How and where do print cultures contribute to the formation and negotiation of national, regional, and local identity?
- How did regional printers progress the industry technically? What were the unique features of the regional trade and its methods?
- How did print contribute to the material development of different locations?
- How do various positions intersect for print personnel in the regions: gender, ethnicity, class, religion?
- Who were the key individuals in regional print cultures?
- How do print personnel articulate and exercise their agency within place and space (geographical regions, architectural spaces)? How does this differ according to gender?
- What were the positions and responsibilities available to women in the regional print trade? How do these compare with the metropolis?
- What kind of agencies do print workers have and how does this differ according to location or to status within the trade?
- How do particular printed forms (e.g. newspapers, periodicals, printers’ letters, print trade autobiography, advertisements) construct relationships between regions? And how do they articulate or demonstrate the agency of the print trade?
- What are the relationships between different printed forms in regional print culture?