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George Smith: publisher

Eric Glasgow (Eric Glasgow is a Retired University Teacher, Southport, Merseyside, UK.)

Library Review

ISSN: 0024-2535

Article publication date: 1 September 1999

224

Abstract

This is a brief study of the character, and the professional career, of one of the most spectacular and prolific of all the huge medley of book‐publishers in Victorian London. George Smith is perhaps today somewhat overshadowed by other famous names. Nevertheless, in 1944, the Cambridge historian, G.M. Trevelyan, singled him from the rest: as the publisher of the monumental Dictionary of National Biography. As the nineteenth century’s cult of printed books inevitably now recedes in favour of information technology, perhaps the time is ripe for this succinct evaluation of an extraordinary publisher from Victorian times who promoted not only works by Leslie Stephen, Thackeray, and many other literary men but particularly works by women‐novelists, such as Charlotte Bronte and Elizabeth Gaskell, despite the fact that he was far from being a “feminist”, in our own contemporary sense.

Keywords

Citation

Glasgow, E. (1999), "George Smith: publisher", Library Review, Vol. 48 No. 6, pp. 290-298. https://doi.org/10.1108/00242539910283813

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1999, MCB UP Limited

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