ABSTRACT

This volume assembles documents that illustrate the changing relations between authors and publishers in the nineteenth century, and the impact of copyright reform on publishing practices. The enormous expansion in the scale and variety of the marketplace for print after 1815 provided new opportunities for authors and prompted debates over intellectual property and the working relations between authors and publishers. The volume documents the impact of these changes on the publishing industry and its markets, focusing on key moments such as the emergence of the professional literary agent in the late 1870s and the formation of the Incorporated Society of Authors in 1883. It also includes key contemporary material related to copyright and intellectual property, which were major battle grounds affecting nineteenth-century textual circulation, author/publisher relations, financial sustainability, competitiveness in international markets, and industrial relations. The British publishing industry’s attempts to control piracy and unrestricted circulation of their titles in the US and elsewhere found expression in a number of pressure campaigns, formal government commissions, legal acts, and contributions to public debate through journal articles, pamphlets, speeches, and newspaper accounts, of which a representative selection are featured in this volume.

part I|101 pages

Authors, Publishers and Agents

chapter 2|15 pages

Authors and Publishers

chapter 4|19 pages

Publishers and Authors

chapter 8|7 pages

The Literary Agent

chapter 9|27 pages

Is Barabbas a Necessity?

A discourse on publishers and publishing

part II|139 pages

Authors, Publishers and Copyright Law

chapter 11|12 pages

The Copy-Right Law

chapter 14|3 pages

New Copyright Bill

chapter 15|6 pages

Literary and Musical Copyright

Routledge v Low

chapter 16|20 pages

Literary Copyright

Seven Letters Addressed by Permission to the Right Hon. The Earl Stanhope (extracts)

chapter 17|15 pages

Copyright

chapter 18|31 pages

Copyright, National and International

With Some Remarks on the Position of Authors and Publishers by a Publisher (extract)

chapter 20|9 pages

Thou Shalt not Steal

chapter 21|4 pages

The American Copyright Bill

chapter 23|9 pages

The Present Situation

part III|139 pages

Publishers and the Society of Authors

chapter 25|6 pages

The Mysteries of Publishing

An interview with Messrs Chatto and Windus

chapter 27|20 pages

Archdeacon Farrar and the Publishers

Correspondence from The Times, 7–14 October 1890

chapter 28|25 pages

The Hardships of Publishing

Letters to ‘The Athenaeum’ (extracts)

chapter 29|28 pages

The Pen and the Book (Extracts)

chapter 30|10 pages

Am I a Thief?

A publisher's reply to Sir Walter Besant