The Use of Type Damage as Evidence in Bibliographical Description

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G. Thomas Tanselle

Abstract

Accidental variations in the typography of books can furnish important clues about the regular processes of printing—both in compositorial analysis and the classification and ordering of successive printings, issue and states. The article considers the question: what degree of physical detail should be recorded in a descriptive bibliography? Examples of type-damage discovered in a collation of Herman Melville’s works are illustrated.

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Research Article

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