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The Publishers Association 1896–1946

This is the story of how the Publishing Association evolved from the nineteenth century to after World War II.

R. J. L. Kingsford (Author)

9780521130844, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 11 February 2010

240 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm, 0.36 kg

This 1970 text tells the story of an important trade association, called into being by the crisis in British bookselling in the late nineteenth century and founded - largely by the wisdom of Sir Frederick Macmillan - on the Net Book Agreement. Through the Net Book Agreement, it provided booksellers and publishers with assurance of retail price stability and has also provided the guiding principles of the Publishing Association's activity since its foundation. This book traces the founding of the Net Book Agreement to after World War II when the book trade faced many problems and crises.

Preface
Introduction: the 1852 verdict
1. 1895–1900: the founding of the Association and the Net Book Agreement
2. 1901–1908: through the Book War
3. 1908–1914: copyright and novel prices
4. 1914–1919: World War I
5. 1919–1927: reconstruction and strikes
6. 1924–1930: new aims and opportunities
7. 1931–1939 (1): the Great Depression, markets and rights
8. 1931–1939 (2): book clubs, Book Tokens, book weeks
9. 1939–1946 (1): World War II: the book front
10. 1939–1946 (2): World War II: the export markets, trade relations at home
Epilogue: the 1962 verdict
Appendices
Bibliography
Index.

Subject Areas: Bibliographies, catalogues [GBCR]

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