03.01.2013 Views

INTRODUCTION TO SCHOLARLY EDITING ... - Rare Book School

INTRODUCTION TO SCHOLARLY EDITING ... - Rare Book School

INTRODUCTION TO SCHOLARLY EDITING ... - Rare Book School

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Transform your PDFs into Flipbooks and boost your revenue!

Leverage SEO-optimized Flipbooks, powerful backlinks, and multimedia content to professionally showcase your products and significantly increase your reach.

Tanselle: Introduction to Scholarly Editing (2002) � Part 9: Writings on Analytical Bibliography 195<br />

Fredson Bowers, "An Examination of the Method of Proof-Correction in Lear," Library 5th ser. 2<br />

(1947-48): 20-44. Reprinted in his Essays in Bibliography, Text, and Editing (1975), pp. 212-39.<br />

Paul S. Dunkin, "Foxe's Acts and Monuments, 1570, and Single-Page Imposition," Library 5th ser. 2<br />

(1947-48): 159-70.<br />

Guy A. Battle, "The Case of the Altered 'c'--A Bibliographical Problem in the Beaumont and Fletcher<br />

First Folio," Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 42 (1948): 66-70.<br />

Fredson Bowers, "Two Notes on Running Titles as Bibliographical Evidence," Papers of the<br />

Bibliographical Society of America 42 (1948): 143-48.<br />

Harry R. Hoppe, The Bad Quarto of ROMEO AND JULIET: A Bibliographical and Textual Study<br />

(1948). [Esp. pp. 46-56.]<br />

Fredson Bowers, "Bibliographical Evidence from a Resetting in Caryll's Sir Salomon (1691)," Library<br />

5th ser. 3 (1948-49): 134-37.<br />

Fredson Bowers, "Running-Title Evidence for Determining Half-Sheet Imposition," Studies in<br />

Bibliography 1 (1948-49): 199-202. Reprinted in his Essays in Bibliography, Text, and Editing<br />

(1975), pp. 254-57.<br />

Gerald J. Eberle, "Nosce Teipsum (1599) by Sir John Davies: A Bibliographical Puzzle," Studies in<br />

Bibliography 1 (1948-49): 135-48.<br />

C. William Miller, "A Bibliographical Study of Parthenissa by Roger Boyle Earl of Orrery," Studies in<br />

Bibliography 2 (1949-50): 115-37.<br />

George R. Price, "The First Edition of A Faire Quarrell," Library 5th ser. 4 (1949-50): 137-41.<br />

Philip Williams, Jr., "The 'Second Issue' of Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida, 1609," Studies in<br />

Bibliography 2 (1949-50): 25-33.<br />

Fredson Bowers, "A Crux in the Text of [Nathaniel] Lee's Princess of Cleve (1689), II.i," Harvard<br />

Library Bulletin 4 (1950): 409-11.<br />

George R. Price, "Compositors' Methods with Two Quartos Reprinted by Augustine Mathewes," Papers<br />

of the Bibliographical Society of America 44 (1950): 269-74.<br />

Fredson Bowers, "The Supposed Cancel in Southerne's The Disappointment Reconsidered," Library 5th<br />

ser. 5 (1950-51): 140-49.<br />

Gerald J. Eberle, "The Composition and Printing of Middleton's A Mad World, My Masters," Studies<br />

in Bibliography 3 (1950-51): 246-52.<br />

Harold Jenkins, "The 1631 Quarto of The Tragedy of Hoffman," Library 5th ser. 6 (1951): 88-99.<br />

Fredson Bowers, "The Variant Sheets in John Banks's Cyrus the Great, 1696," Studies in Bibliography<br />

4 (1951-52): 174-82.<br />

Fredson Bowers, "The Pirated Quartos of Dryden's State of Innocence," Studies in Bibliography 5 (1952-<br />

53): 166-69.<br />

Fredson Bowers, "A Definitive Text of Shakespeare: Problems and Methods," in Studies in Shakespeare,<br />

ed. Arthur D. Matthews and Clark M. Emery (1953), pp. 11-29.<br />

George R. Price, "The First Edition of [Middleton's] Your Five Gallants and of Michaelmas Term,"<br />

Library 5th ser. 8 (1953): 23-29.<br />

Fredson Bowers, "Motteax's Love's Jest: A Running-Title and Presswork Problem," Papers of the<br />

Bibliographical Society of America 48 (1954): 268-273. Reprinted in his Essays in Bibliography,<br />

Text, and Editing (1975), pp. 269-74.<br />

Fredson Bowers, "Underprinting in Mary Pix, The Spanish Wives (1696)," Library 5th ser. 9 (1954):<br />

248-54.<br />

This page is from a document available in full at http://www.rarebookschool.org/tanselle/

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!