
 
                             
                In a period characterized by expanding markets, national consolidation, and social upheaval, print culture picked up momentum as the nineteenth century turned into the twentieth. Books, magazines, and newspapers were produced more quickly and more cheaply, reaching ever-increasing numbers of readers. Volume 4 of A History of the Book in America traces the complex, even contradictory consequences of these changes in the production, circulation, and use of print.
Contributors to this volume explain that although mass production encouraged consolidation and standardization, readers increasingly adapted print to serve their own purposes, allowing for increased diversity in the midst of concentration and integration. Considering the book in larger social and cultural networks, essays address the rise of consumer culture, the extension of literacy and reading through schooling, the expansion of secondary and postsecondary education and the growth of the textbook industry, the growing influence of the professions and their dependence on print culture, and the history of relevant technology. As the essays here attest, the expansion of print culture between 1880 and 1940 enabled it to become part of Americans' everyday business, social, political, and religious lives.
Contributors:
 Megan Benton, Pacific Lutheran University
 Paul S. Boyer, University of Wisconsin-Madison
 Una M. Cadegan, University of Dayton
 Phyllis Dain, Columbia University
 James P. Danky, University of Wisconsin-Madison
 Ellen Gruber Garvey, New Jersey City University
 Peter Jaszi, American University
 Carl F. Kaestle, Brown University
 Nicolas Kanellos, University of Houston
 Richard L. Kaplan, ABC-Clio Publishing
 Marcel Chotkowski LaFollette, Washington, D.C.
 Elizabeth Long, Rice University
 Elizabeth McHenry, New York University
 Sally M. Miller, University of the Pacific
 Richard Ohmann, Wesleyan University
 Janice A. Radway, Duke University
 Joan Shelley Rubin, University of Rochester
 Jonathan D. Sarna, Brandeis University
 Charles A. Seavey, University of Missouri, Columbia
 Michael Schudson, University of California, San Diego
 William Vance Trollinger Jr., University of Dayton
 Richard L. Venezky (1938-2004)
 James L. W. West III, Pennsylvania State University
 Wayne A. Wiegand, Florida State University
 Michael Winship, University of Texas at Austin
 Martha Woodmansee, Case Western Reserve University
 
     
    