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The British Book Trade and Spanish American Independence

Education and Knowledge Transmission in Transcontinental Perspective

Eugenia Roldán Vera author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd

Published:28th Dec '03

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The British Book Trade and Spanish American Independence cover

The British Book Trade and Spanish American Independence is a pioneering study of the export of books from Britain to early-independent Spanish America, which considers all phases of production, distribution, reading, and re-writing of British books in the region, and explores the role that these works played in the formation of national identities in the new countries. Analysing in particular the publishing house of Rudolph Ackermann, which dominated the export of British books in Spanish to the former colonies in the 1820s, it discusses the ways in which the printed form of these publications affected the knowledge conveyed by them. After a survey of the peculiar characteristics of print culture in early-independent Spanish America and the trends in the import of European books in the region, the author examines the operation of Ackermann's publishing enterprise. She shows how the collaborative nature of this enterprise, involving a number of Spanish American diplomats as sponsors and Spanish exiles as writers and translators, shaped the characteristics of its publications, and how the notion of 'useful knowledge' conveyed by them was deployed in the service of both commercial and educational concerns. The hitherto unexplored mechanisms of book import, distribution, wholesale and retailing in Spanish America in the 1820s are also analysed as is the way in which the significance of the knowledge transmitted by those books shifted in the course of their production and distribution. The author examines how the question-and-answer form of Ackermann's textbooks constrained both publishers and writers and oriented their readers' relation with the texts. She then looks at the various ways in which foreign knowledge was appropriated in the construction of individual, social, national, and continental identities; this is done through the study of a number of individual reading experiences and through the analysis of the editions and adaptations of Ackermann's textbooks during the nineteenth century.

' This book [...] will widen remarkably the horizons of British book historians.' Rare Books Newsletter 'Roldán Vera's monograph is a major contribution to bibliographical scholarship and intellectual history. Original and thought-provoking...' Bibliographical Society of America 'This detailed and well-prepared study draws on a wealth of documentary evidence to trace the important role played by British publishers [...] in the dissemination of knowledge in the emergent Spanish American republics... The authors is to be congratulated on a well-documented study of an important but neglected area of Latin American bibliography.' The Library 'This fascinating and well-written book, [...] will be of interest to scholars of the British book trade and historians of nineteenth-century Spanish America alike.' Journal of the Printing Historical Society ’... the book is clearly written and thoroughly documented, and it would be well placed in graduate seminars. For those who are working in the field of Latin American print culture, Roldán Vera's study is essential reading.’ Hispanic American Historical Review

ISBN: 9780754632788

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 566g

304 pages