y separately published work icon Script & Print periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2014... vol. 38 no. 1 February 2014 of Script and Print est. 2005 Script & Print
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2014 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
A Pedagogical Tool for Studying the History of the Book : Thirty-Five Years of Bibliographical Presses in Australia and New Zealand, 1977-2012, Per Henningsgaard , Kristen Colgin , Clyde Veleker , single work criticism
'In the early 1960s, Philip Gaskell conducted a survey of bibliographical presses in the English-speaking world. Gaskell defined a bibliographical press as 'a workshop or laboratory which is carried on chiefly for the purpose of demonstrating and investigating the printing techniques of the past by means of setting type by hand, and of printing from it on a simple press.' Gaskell's survey found a total of twenty-five presses that he deemed bibliographical. Sixteen of the twenty-five presses had been established in the years between 1960 and 1963. From these results, Gaskell concluded that there was a boom in the creation and subsequent operation of bibliographical presses in the early 1960s.' (Publication abstract)
(p. 5-25)
A Professional Author - How G. M. Glaskin Earned a Living, Jeremy Fisher , single work biography
'Western Australian author Gerald Marcus Glaskin (GMG; 16 December 1923-11 March 2000) wrote from life, using his experiences to continually expand his creative repertoire. In one sense, this was to be his downfall, as his life was unconventional for his time. Because he mined own experiences so much in his creative writing, his works eventually moved out of mainstream markets. However, this paper focuses on his financial success as a writer, details of which can be documented through study of the meticulous records kept by both GMG and his publisher, Barrie and Rockliff of London.' (Publication abstract)
(p. 39-56)
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