Pocket Books and Portable Writing: The Pocket Memorandum Book in Eighteenth-Century England and Wales

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Pocket Books and Portable Writing: The Pocket Memorandum Book in Eighteenth-Century England and Wales. / Colclough, S.M.
In: Yearbook of English Studies, Vol. 45 , 20.07.2015, p. 159-177.

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Colclough SM. Pocket Books and Portable Writing: The Pocket Memorandum Book in Eighteenth-Century England and Wales. Yearbook of English Studies. 2015 Jul 20;45 :159-177. doi: 10.5699/yearenglstud.45.2015.0159

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Colclough, S.M. / Pocket Books and Portable Writing : The Pocket Memorandum Book in Eighteenth-Century England and Wales. In: Yearbook of English Studies. 2015 ; Vol. 45 . pp. 159-177.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Pocket Books and Portable Writing

T2 - The Pocket Memorandum Book in Eighteenth-Century England and Wales

AU - Colclough, S.M.

PY - 2015/7/20

Y1 - 2015/7/20

N2 - From the mid-eighteenth century onwards, the pocket ‘memorandum book’ was a particularly common object, found amongst the stock of almost all small stationer-booksellers in Britain. This essay begins with an investigation of the development of the memorandum book as a genre that was marketed at distinct audiences divided by gender. It argues that these books became steady sellers because they provided their purchasers with important (easily retrievable) information about modern life, combined with blank pages on which financial accounts and other personal information could be recorded, the whole packaged in a form that allowed the book to function as a kind of wallet in which manuscript texts and personal items could be stored. Picking up on recent work by Jennie Batchelor and Sandro Jung on how such books were consumed, this essay concludes with an examination of the marks left within surviving copies. These marks suggests that memorandum books were of particular significance to the expansion of print culture after 1750 because they were not so much read as remade in the image of their owners who used them as tools in the organization of new forms of sociability.

AB - From the mid-eighteenth century onwards, the pocket ‘memorandum book’ was a particularly common object, found amongst the stock of almost all small stationer-booksellers in Britain. This essay begins with an investigation of the development of the memorandum book as a genre that was marketed at distinct audiences divided by gender. It argues that these books became steady sellers because they provided their purchasers with important (easily retrievable) information about modern life, combined with blank pages on which financial accounts and other personal information could be recorded, the whole packaged in a form that allowed the book to function as a kind of wallet in which manuscript texts and personal items could be stored. Picking up on recent work by Jennie Batchelor and Sandro Jung on how such books were consumed, this essay concludes with an examination of the marks left within surviving copies. These marks suggests that memorandum books were of particular significance to the expansion of print culture after 1750 because they were not so much read as remade in the image of their owners who used them as tools in the organization of new forms of sociability.

U2 - 10.5699/yearenglstud.45.2015.0159

DO - 10.5699/yearenglstud.45.2015.0159

M3 - Article

VL - 45

SP - 159

EP - 177

JO - Yearbook of English Studies

JF - Yearbook of English Studies

SN - 0306-2473

ER -