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Printing and the Book Trade in the West Indies

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The Caribbean's division among European powers fostered presses reflecting colonial powers' diverse stances on printing. This book focuses on English-speaking islands, including Jamaica, Bahamas, B...
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  • 31 December 1987
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The division of the Caribbean islands between the major European powers resulted in the growth of a number of regional presses, providing the colonists with the reading matter they would have expected from their countries of origin. The differing attitudes of the colonial powers towards the press is evident both in the date when printing was first introduced in the colonies, and the number and type of works subsequently issued.

Over the last twenty years Professor Cave's research has done much to clarify the development of printing in the West Indies. This volume brings together for the first time his work on the subject, with the addition of seven papers which have previously not been generally available. The author is principally concerned with printing in the English-speaking islands of the Caribbean, in particular with Jamaica, but there are also articles on printing in the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, the Dutch West Indies, Grenada and Trinidad. The parallels with early printing in the North American colonies are particularly important. Professor Cave has contributed an introduction and additional notes which draw attention to fresh material subsequently discovered. There is an index and bibliography.
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Price: £50.00
Pages: 320
Publisher: Pindar Press
Imprint: Pindar Press
Series: Studies in the History of Printing
Publication Date: 31 December 1987
ISBN: 9780907132356
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

HISTORY / Americas (North, Central, South, West Indies), History of the Americas

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Preface

Aspects of early printing and the book trade in the West Indies

The use of slave labour in West Indian printing houses

The West Indian planter and his reading

An advertisement by John Wells

Printing in 19th-century Belize

The printing of The Honduras Almanack

A Grenada printer's commendatory verse

Printing in 18th-century Jamaica

Abstracts of wills and inventories of Jamaican printers

An inventory of the first Jamaican printing house

Thomas Craddock's books

The first printers in Jamaica

Two Jamaican printers

The plantocracy's passion for Porcupine

A letter from Bernard Romans

Early circulating libraries in Jamaica

The first Jamaican private press

The St. James Printery, Montego Bay

A proposal for a papermill in Jamaica

Printing in the Swedish West Indies

Printing in Trinidad: some preliminary notes

The first Trinidad Guardian

Early printing in South Trinidad

The early printers of Grand Turk

Bibliography

Index