No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
The stuff of everyday life: a brief introduction to the history and definition of printed ephemera
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 June 2016
Abstract
Rubbish for the waste-paper basket or valuable social documents? What is printed ephemera and what can it reveal to us about the everyday lives of people in the past? This brief introduction to the subject goes some way to answer these questions, and poses others.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Art Libraries Journal , Volume 31 , Special Issue 4: Ephemera as a research resource: special issue , 2006 , pp. 5 - 8
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Art Libraries Society 2006
References
1.
Rickards, Maurice, Collecting printed ephemera (Oxford: Phaidon-Christie’s Ltd, 1988), p.13.Google Scholar
2.
Ibid., p.14.Google Scholar
3.
Johnson, John, The printer, his customers and his men (London: J. M. Dent and Sons Ltd, 1933), p.46.Google Scholar
4. Asa Briggs, foreword to Maurice Rickards, Collecting printed ephemera, p.9.Google Scholar
5. Rickards, pp.16-17. Maurice Rickards was one of the founder members of the Society of Printed Ephemera and wrote extensively on the subject. His own exemplary collection, amounting to some 20,000 items, is now part of the research collections of the Centre for Ephemera Studies, in the Department of Typography & Graphic Communication at the University of Reading. Lord Asa Briggs is the President of the Society of Printed Ephemera.Google Scholar
6. Text of a tradecard preserved in the Pepys Library at Magdalene College Cambridge and quoted in Maurice Rickards, Collecting printed ephemera, p.40.Google Scholar
7.
Twyman, Michael, ‘Editor’s introduction,’ in Rickards, Maurice, The encyclopedia of ephemera: a guide to the fragmentary documents of everyday life for the collector, curator and historian (London: British Library, 2000), p.v.Google Scholar
9.
Clinton, Alan, Printed ephemera: collection, organisation and access (London: Clive Bingley, 1981), p.7.Google Scholar