[This is a bibliography of works cited in my Piracy: The Intellectual Property Wars from Gutenberg to Gates.  It is, I am sure, imperfect.  I hope to improve it when time permits.  AJ]

 

BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

Abbatista, G. 1985.  “The Business of Paternoster Row: Towards a Publishing History of the Universal History (1736–65).” Publishing History 17: 5–50.

Abbott, J. 1952.  The Story of Francis, Day and Hunter. London: Francis, Day and Hunter.

Achinstein, S. 1994.  Milton and the revolutionary reader. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

An account of the expence of correcting and improving sundry books. 1774.  N.p., n.d.

An account of the rise and progress of the dispute between the masters and journeymen printers.  1799.  London: published for the benefit of the men in confinement; sold by J. Ridgway.

“An act for amending the law for granting patents for inventions.” 1855.  15 &16 Vict. c.83, §xviii. In J. Coryton, A treatise on the law of letters-patent, 440-66. London: H. Sweet.

 “An Act to extend the provisions of the Designs Act, 1850, and to give protection from piracy to persons exhibiting new inventions at the Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations in 1851.” 1850. 14 & 15 Vict., c.8.

Adams, J.R.R. 1987. The printed word and the common man: popular culture in Ulster, 1700-1900. Antrim: Queen’s University of Belfast.

[Addison, J.] 1712. The thoughts of a Tory author, concerning the press. London: for A. Baldwin.

Advice from fairy-land. 1726. Dublin.

Aingier, M. 2002. Gilbert and Sullivan. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Allen, B. 1699. The natural history of the chalybeat and purging waters of England. London: printed and sold by S. Smith and B. Walford.

Allen, E., J.F. Clarke, N. McCord, and D.J. Rowse. 1971. The North-East engineers’ strikes of 1871: the Nine Hours’ League. Newcastle: F. Graham.

“An American.” 1838. A Plea for Authors, and the Rights of Literary Property. New York: Adlard and Saunders.

Amory, H. and D. Hall, eds. 2000. A History of the book in America: I. The colonial book in the Atlantic world. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

An enquiry into the nature and origin of literary property. 1762. London: for W. Flexney.

Anderson, N. 2007. “A war of attrition.” Ars technical, March 18. http://arstechnica.com/articles/culture/mediadefender.ars.

Armstong, W. 1861. “On the Patent Laws.” The Engineer, September 13, 154.

Arner, R.D. 1991. Dobson’s Encyclopaedia: The publisher, text, and publication of America’s first Britannica, 1789-1803. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.

The Art of Printing. 1764. Dublin.

Ashby, N.M. 1980. Charles Sealsfield. Duarte, CA: N.M. Ashby; Stuttgart, Germany: Sealsfield-Gesellschaft.

Atkyns, R. 1664. The original and growth of printing. London: by J. Streater for the author.

Attig, J.C. 1985. The Works of John Locke: A comprehensive bibliography from the seventeenth century to the present. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.

Augst, T. 2003. The clerk’s tale: young men and moral life in nineteenth-century America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Augustine, Saint. 1620. Of the Citie of God. Translated by I.H. 2nd edition. London: by G. Eld and M. Flesher.

Augustine, Saint. 1984. De Civitate Dei. Translated by H. Bettenson in Concerning the City of God against the Pagans. Harmondsworth: Penguin.

Bailey, P. 1998. Popular culture and performance in the Victorian city. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Bain, R. 1933. “Scientist as citizen.” Social forces 11: 412-5.

Baines, P. and P. Rogers. 2007. Edmund Curll, bookseller. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Baker, T.N. 1999. Sentiment and Celebrity: Nathaniel Parker Willis and the trials of literary fame. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Balsamo, L. 1990. Bibliography: history of a tradition. Translated by W.A. Pettas. Berkeley, CA: B.M. Rosenthal.

Bann, S. 1995. Under the sign: John Bargrave as collector, traveler, and witness. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

Barnard, T. 2006. “Print culture, 1700-1800.” In The Oxford history of the Irish book, III: the Irish book in English 1550-1800, edited by R. Gillespie and A. Hadfield, 34-58. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Barnes, J.J. 1974. Authors, publishers, and politicians: the quest for an Anglo-American copyright agreement 1815-1854. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.

Barry, P. 1865. Shoeburyness and the guns: a philosophical discourse. London: Sampson, Low, son, and Marston.

Bastable, M.J. 2004. Arms and the state: Sir William Armstrong and the remaking of British naval power, 1854-1914. Aldershot: Ashgate.

Becker, H.S. 1982. Art worlds. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

Behrend, B.A. 1971. “The work of Oliver Heaviside.” In Heaviside, Electromagnetic Theory, I, 469-504. 3 vols. New York: Chelsea Publishing.

Behrens, J. 2008. “Of what will not men be capable? Publishing and piracy in eighteenth-century Dublin and the Sir Charles Grandison episode.” Unpublished MA thesis, University of Chicago.

Beier, L.M. 1989. “Experience and experiment: Robert Hooke, illness, and medicine.” In Robert Hooke: New Studies, edited by M. Hunter and S.J. Schaffer, 235-51. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell.

Belanger, T. 1975. “Booksellers’ trade sales 1718–1768.” The Library, 5th ser., 30: 281–302.

Bell, R. 1770-71. “Address to the Subscribers.” In W. Robertson, The history of the reign of Charles V, III, [24-29]. 3 vols. America [Philadelphia]: for the subscribers.

Bell, R. 1776. “A few more words, on the Freedom of the Press.” In J. Tucker, The True interest of Britain, set forth in regard to the Colonies, [67-69]. Philadelphia: printed, and sold, by Robert Bell.

Beltz, G.F. 1834. A review of the Chandos Peerage case. London: R. Bentley.

Ben-Atar, D. S. 2004. Trade secrets: intellectual piracy and the origins of American industrial power. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Beniger, J.R. 1986. The control revolution: technological and economic origins of the information society. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Benkler, Y. 2006. The wealth of networks: how social production transforms markets and freedom. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.

Berkeley, G. 1948-57.  The works of George Berkeley Bishop of Cloyne. Ed. A.A. Luce and T.E. Jessop. London: Thomas, Nelson and Sons, xxxx vols.

Berlioz, H. 1999 [1956]. Evenings with the orchestra. Translated by J. Barzun. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Bernal, J.D. 1967 [1939]. The social function of science. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Biagioli, M. 1993. Galileo, Courtier: The Practice of Science in the Culture of Absolutism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Biagioli, M. 1995. “Knowledge, Freedom and Brotherly Love: Homosociability and the Accademia dei Lincei.” Configurations 3: 139-66.

Biagioli, M. 1996. “Etiquette, Interdependence, and Sociability in Seventeenth-Century Science.” Critical Inquiry 22: 193-238.

Biagioli, M. 1996. “From print to patents: living on instruments in early modern Europe.” History of Science 44, 1-48.

Biggs, N. 1650/1651. Mataeotechnia Medicinae Praxeos. The vanity of the craft of physick. London: for G. Calvert.

Birch, T. 1756-57. History of the Royal Society of London for improving of natural knowledge, from its first rise. 4 vols. London: Millar.

Blagden, C. 1953 [1956]. The Notebook of Thomas Bennet and Henry Clements (1686-1719) with some aspects of book trade practice. Oxford: Oxford Bibliographical Society Publications, n.s., 6.

Blagden, C. 1960. “The ‘Company’ of Printers.” Studies in Bibliography 13: 3–17.

Blagden, C. 1961. “Thomas Carnan and the Almanack Monopoly.” Studies in Bibliography 14: 23–43.

Blagden, C. 1977 [1960]. The Stationers’ Company: A History, 1403-1959. London: George Allen and Unwin. Reprinted by Stanford University Press.

Blair, A. 2003. “Reading Strategies for Coping with Information Overload, ca. 1550-1700.” Journal of the History of Ideas 64: 11-28.

Blakely, A.T. 1858. A cheap and simple method of manufacturing strong cannon. London: J. Ridgway.

Blakely, A.T. 1859. A letter from Captain Blakely, H.P., Royal Artillery, to the Secretary of State for War, claiming the original invention of an indispensable feature of the Armstrong gun. London: J. Ridgway.

Blakey, D. 1939. The Minerva Press 1790-1820. London: Bibliographical Society.

Blanning, T.C.W. 2002. The culture of power and the power of culture: Old Regime Europe 1660-1789. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Blum, R. 1980 [1969]. Bibliographia: an inquiry into its definition and designations. Translated by M.V. Rovelstad. Chicago: American Library Association.

Bohn, H.G. 1865. Appendix to the Bibliographer’s Manual [of Lowndes]. London: Bell and Daldy.

Boncompain, J. 2001. La Révolution des Auteurs: Naissance de la Propriété Intellectuelle (1773-1815). Paris: Fayard.

Bonnell, T.F. 1987. “John Bell’s Poets of Great Britain: The ‘little trifling edition’ revisited.” Modern Philology 85: 128-52.

Boswell, J. 1774. The decision of the court of session, upon the question of literary property. Edinburgh: J. Donaldson, for A. Donaldson.

Bowie, K. 2007. Scottish public opinion and the Anglo-Scottish union 1699-1707. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell/Royal Historical Society.

Bradsher, E.L. 1912. Mathew Carey: Editor, author, and publisher. NY: Columbia University Press.

Breen, C., and C. A. Dahlbom. 1960. “Signaling systems for control of telephone switching.” Bell System Technical Journal 39:6 (November): 1381-1444.

Breen, T.H. 2004. The marketplace of revolution: how consumer politics shaped American independence. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Breslauer, B.H. and R. Folter. 1984. Bibliography: its history and development. New York: Grolier Club.

Breval, [J.D.] 1718. The play is the plot. London: for J. Tonson.

Brewer, J. 1995. “This, that and the other: public, social and private in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.” In Shifting the boundaries: transformation of the languages of public and private in the eighteenth century, edited by D. Castiglione and L. Sharpe, 1-21. Exeter: University of Exeter Press.

[Brewster, D.] 1818. Description and method of using the patent kaleidoscope invented by Dr. Brewster. N.p.

Brewster, D. 1819. A treatise of the kaleidoscope. Edinburgh: for A. Constable and Co.; and Longman et al., London.

Brewster, D. 1830. Androides.” In Edinburgh Encyclopaedia. 18 vols. Edinburgh: for W. Blackwood et al.

[Brewster, D.] 1830. “[Review of] Reflexions on the Decline of Science in England.” Quarterly Review 43: 305-42.

[Brewster, D.] 1855-1856.  The Paris Exposition and the patent laws.” North British Review 24 [American edition, vol. 19] (November 1855-February 1856): 122-42.

Brewster, D. 1858. The kaleidoscope: its history, theory, and construction. London: J. Murray.

[Brewster, D.] 1864. “The patent laws.” Westminster Review n.s. 26 (July-October): 322-57.

Brewster, D. 1866. “Sir David Brewster, K.H., Ll.D., F.R.S., etc., on the Patent Laws.” Scientific Review, January, 169.

A Brief Discourse Concerning Printing and Printers. London: “Printed for a Society of Printers,” 1663.

Briggs, A. 1995 [1961-95]. The History of Broadcasting in the United Kingdom. 5 vols. London: Oxford University Press.

Britton, J. 1814. The rights of literature. London: for the author.

Brooks, T. 1668. A string of pearls. London: for John Hancock.

Brown, G.S. 1999. “After the fall: The chute of a play, droits d’auteur, and literary property in the old regime.” French Historical Studies 22:4 (Fall): 465-91.

Brydges, S.E., ed. 1812. Collins’s Peerage of England. 9 vols. London: F.C. and J. Rivington et al.

Brydges, S.E. 1814-15. Archaica. 2 vols. London: Longman et al.

Brydges, S.E. 1818. A Summary statement of the great grievance imposed on authors and publishers; and the injury done to literature, by the late copyright act. London: printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, Paternoster Row.

Brydges, S.E. 1819. The population and riches of nations. Paris: J.J. Paschoud.

Brydges, [S.]E. 1824. Gnomica. Geneva: by W. Fick.

Brydges, S.E. 1825. A Note on the suppression of memoirs announced by the author in June, 1825; containing numerous strictures on contemporary public characters. Paris: J. Smith.

Brydges, S.E. 1825. Stemmata Illustria; praecipue regia. Paris: printed by J. Smith.

Brydges, S.E. 1831. Modern aristocracy, or the bard’s reception. Geneva: A.L. Vignier.

Brydges, S.E. 1832. The lake of Geneva. 2 vols. Geneva: by A.L. Vignier, for Bossange and Co., London, and A. Cherbulier, Geneva.

Brydges, S.E. 1834. The Autobiography, times, opinions, and contemporaries of Sir Egerton Brydges, Bart. K.J. (per legem terrae) Baron Chandos of Sudeley, etc. 2 vols. London: Cochrane and M’Crone.

Brydges, S.E. 1834. Imaginative Biography. 2 vols. London: Saunders and Otley.

Buchanan, J. 1757. Linguae Britannicae vera Pronunciatio. London: for A. Millar.

Buel, R. 1972. Securing the Revolution: Ideology in American politics, 1789-1815. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.

Burrow, J. 1773. The question concerning literary property, determined by the Court of King’s Bench on 20th April, 1769, in the cause between Andrew Millar and Robert Taylor. London: by W. Strahan and M. Woodfall, for B. Tovey.

Butler, M. 1999. “Antiquarianism (popular).” In An Oxford companion to the Romantic age: British culture 1776-1832, edited by I. McCalman, 328-38. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Butler, S. 1908. Characters and passages from notebooks. Ed. A. R. Waller. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Cadbury, D. 2000. The dinosaur hunters. London: Fourth Estate.

Carey, H.C. 1835. Essay on the rate of wages. Philadelphia: Carey, Lea and Blanchard.

Carey, H.C. 1851. The Prospect. Philadelphia: J.S. Skinner.

Carey, H.C. 1853. Letters on International Copyright. Philadelphia: A. Hart.

Carey, H.C. 1865. The way to outdo England without fighting her. Philadelphia: H.C. Baird.

Carey, H.C. 1866. Contraction or Expansion?  Repudiation or Resumption? Letters to the Hon. Hugh M’Culloch, Secretary to the Treasury. Philadelphia: H.C. Baird.

Carey, H.C. 1866. The resources of the Union. Philadelphia: H.C. Baird.

Carey, H.C. 1867. Review of the Decade 1857-1867. Philadelphia: Collins.

Carey, H.C. 1868. Letters on international copyright. 2nd ed. New York: Hurd and Houghton.

Carey, H.C. 1872. The international copyright question considered. Philadelphia: H.C. Baird.

Carey, H.C. 1872. The unity of law; as exhibited in the relations of physical, social, mental, and moral science. Philadelphia: H.C. Baird.

Carey, H.C. 1876. Commerce, Christianity, and Civilization, versus British Free Trade. Philadelphia: Collins.

Carey, M. 1786. The plagi-scurriliad. Philadelphia: printed and sold by the author.

[Carey, M.] 1794. A Short account of Algiers. 2nd ed. Philadelphia: printed for Mathew Carey.

Carey, M. 1795. Treaty of amity, commerce, and navigationto which is annexed a copious appendix. 2nd ed. Philadelphia: for M. Carey.

[Carey, M.] 1796. Address to the House of Representatives. Philadelphia: for M. Carey.

Carey, M. 1796. “Thoughts on the policy of encouraging migration.” In Carey, Miscellaneous trifles in prose, 110-24. Philadelphia: for the author.

Carey, M. 1799. Plumb Pudding. 2nd ed. Philadelphia: printed for the author.

Carey, M. 1799. To the public. Philadelphia, February 5.

Carey, M. 1813. Address to the booksellers of the United States. Philadelphia: T.S. Manning.

[Carey, M.] 1819. Address of the Philadelphia Society for the Promotion of National Industry. No. 2. 2nd ed. December.

Carey, M. 1820. A view of the ruinous consequences of a dependence on foreign markets. Philadelphia: M. Carey and Son.

Carey, M. 1825. An Appeal to the justice and humanity of the stockholders of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal. 2nd ed. [Philadelphia].

Carey, M. 1942 [1833-34, 1837]. Autobiography. New York: E.L. Schwaab. Originally issued in New-England Magazine, 1833-34, and reprinted for private circulation in 1837.

Carlat, L. 1998. “‘A cleanser for the mind’: marketing radio receivers for the American home, 1922-1932.” In His and hers: Gender, consumption, and technology, edited by R. Horowitz and A. Mohun, 115-37. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia.

Carpmael, W. 1843. Law reports of patent cases. London: by A. Macintosh for the proprietor.

Carswell, J. 1960. The South Sea Bubble. London: Cresset.

Carter, E.C. 1962. The political activities of Mathew Carey, nationalist, 1760-1814. Ph.D. thesis, Bryn Mawr College.

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Cervantes, M. de. 2003. Don Quixote. Translated by E. Grossman. New York: Ecco.

Champion, J. 2003. Republican Learning: John Toland and the crisis of Christian culture, 1696-1722. Manchester: Manchester University Press.

Chandler, A.D. 1977. The visible hand: the managerial revolution in American business. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Chandler, J. (ed.) 2009. “The fate of disciplines.” Critical Inquiry, 35:4.

Chandler, J. 1998. England in 1819: the politics of literary culture and the case of Romantic historicism. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.

Chapman, R. 1992. Selling the Sixties: The Pirates and Pop Music Radio. London: Routledge.

Chapuis, A. and E. Droz. 1958. Automata. New York: Central Book Company.

Chapuis, A. and E. Gélis. 1928. Le monde des Automates. 2 vols. Paris: E. Gélis.

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Chartier, R. 1989. “Leisure and Sociability: Reading Aloud in Early Modern Europe.” In Urban Life in the Renaissance, edited by S. Zimmerman and R.F.E. Wiessman, 103-20. Translated by C. Mossman. London and Toronto: Associated University Presses.

Chartier, R. 1991. The cultural origins of the French Revolution. Translated by L. Cochrane. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Chartier, R. 1994. The order of books: readers, authors, and libraries in Europe between the fourteenth and eighteenth centuries. Cambridge: Polity.

Charvat, W. 1993 [1959]. Literary publishing in America 1790-1850. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.

Choate, P. 1990. Agents of influence. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

Cicero. 1991. On Duties. Edited by M.T. Griffin and E.M. Atkins. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Cicero. 1999. On the Commonwealth and On the Laws. Edited by J.E.G. Zetzel. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Clark, A.J. 1960. The movement for international copyright in nineteenth-century America. Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press.

Clarkin, W. 1984. Mathew Carey: A Bibliography of his publications, 1785-1824. New York: Garland.

Coase, R.H. 1950. British broadcasting: a study in monopoly. London: Longmans, Green, and Co.

Cochran, T.C. 1981. Frontiers of change: early industrialism in America. New York: Oxford University Press.

[Cockrane J.] 1813. The case stated between the public libraries and the booksellers. London: by J. Moyes.

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Collier, J.D. 1803. An essay on the law of patents for new inventions. London: for the author, and sold by Longman and Rees.

Collins, J.  “Silencing Thomas Hobbes: the presbyterians and their printers.”  http://csb.princeton.edu/index.php?app=download&id=11.

Collins, W. 1880. Considerations on the Copyright Question addressed to an American Friend. London: Trubner and Co.

Condorcet, M. de. 2002. “Fragments concerning freedom of the press.” Extracts translated by A. Goldhammer in Daedalus 131:2 (Spring): 57-9.

Connolly, S.J. 1992. Religion, law, and power: the making of Protestant Ireland, 1660-1760. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Considerations in behalf of the booksellers of London and Westminster. N.p., n.d. (1774).

Conway, F., and J. Seigelman. 2005. Dark hero of the information age: in search of Norbert Wiener, the father of cybernetics. New York: Basic Books.

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Cook, H.J. 1994. Trials of an ordinary doctor: Johannes Groenevelt in seventeenth-century London. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

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Coover, J. 1985. Music Publishing, Copyright and Piracy in Victorian England. London: Mansell.

Coover, J. 1990. “Victorian periodicals for the music trade.” Notes (March): 609-21.

Coryate, T. 1611. Coryats Crudities. London: W.S..

Coryton, J. 1855. A treatise on the law of letters-patent. London: H. Sweet.

Coulter, M. 1991. Property in ideas: the patent question in mid-Victorian Britain. Kirksville, Mo: Thomas Jefferson University Press.

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Cowles, V. 1960. The great swindle: the story of the South Sea Bubble. London: Collins.

Cowley, A. 1667. “To the Royal Society.” In T. Sprat, The History of the Royal Society of London. London: J. Martyn and J. Allestrey, 1667.

[Coxe, D. or T.] 1669. A Discourse, wherein the interest of the patient in reference to physick and physicians is soberly debated. London: for C.R.

Coxe, T. 1787. “An address to an assembly of the friends of American manufactures.” American Museum 2: 248-54.

[Coxe, T.] 1792 [1791]. A brief examination of Lord Sheffield's Observations on the commerce of the United States of America. Philadelphia: originally issued in American Museum, March 1791. Reprinted in London.

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Danielian, N.R. 1939. A.T.&T. The story of industrial conquest. New York: Vanguard.

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Davidson, C.N. 1989. “The life and times of Charlotte Temple: the biography of a book.” In Reading in America: Literature and Social History, edited by Davidson, 157-79. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Davies, E. n.d. A Succinct Description of that Elaborate and Matchless pile of Art, called, the Microcosm. Newcaste: by I. Thompson, for E. Davies.

Davies, G. 1984. The private copying of phonograms and videograms. For IFPI. Strasbourg: Council of Europe.

Davies, G. 1986. Piracy of phonograms. 2nd ed. Oxford: ESC Publishing, for European Commission.

Dear, P. 1995. Discipline and Experience: The Mathematical Way in the Scientific Revolution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Dear, P. 2001. Revolutionizing the sciences: European knowledge and its ambitions, 1500-1700. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

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[Defoe, D.] 1704. An essay on the regulation of the press. London: n.p.

[Defoe, D.] 1709. “Miscellanea.” Review 6: 104 (December 3).

[Defoe, D.] 2002 [1719]. The king of pirates. London: Hesperus.

A description of several pieces of mechanism, invented by the Sieur Jacquet Droz. N.p., n.d.

Desmond, A. 1982. Archetypes and ancestors: palaeontology in Victorian London, 1850-1875. London: Blond & Briggs.

Desmond, A. 1989. The politics of evolution: morphology, medicine, and reform in radical London. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.

Desmond, A. 1994. Huxley: The Devil’s Disciple. London: Michael Joseph.

Dickson, D. 2001. “Death of a capital? Dublin and the consequences of union.” In Two capitals: London and Dublin, 1500-1840, edited by P. Clark and R. Gillespie, 111-32. Oxford: Published for The British Academy by Oxford University Press.

Dircks, H. 1861. Perpetuum mobile. London: E. & F.N. Spon.

Dircks, H. 1867. Inventors and inventions. London: E. and F.N. Spon.

[Donaldson, A.]. 1764. Some thoughts on the state of literary property. London: for A. Donaldson.

Dopp, P.-H. 1932. La contrefaçon des livres français en Belgique, 1815-1852. Louvain: Université de Louvain.

Doyle, D.N. 1981. Ireland, Irishmen and Revolutionary America, 1760-1820. Dublin: Mercier.

Dryden, J. 1659. Heroick Stanza’s, on the late Usurper Oliver Cromwell.” In E. Waller, J. Dryden, and T. Sprat, Three poems upon the death of his late Highnesse Oliver Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and Ireland. London: W. Wilson.

Du Clos, S. 1684. Observations on the mineral waters of France. London: for H. Faithorne and J. Kersey.

Duguid, P. 2006. “Limits of self-organization: peer production and ‘laws of quality’.” First Monday 11: http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue11_10/duguid/index.html.

Dunton, J. 2000. The Dublin Scuffle. Edited by A. Carpenter. Dublin: Four Courts Press.

Duppa, R. 1813. An address to the Parliament of Great Britain, on the claims of authors to their own Copy-Right. 2nd ed. London: sold by Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown.

Eamon, W. 1994. Science and the secrets of nature: books of secrets in medieval and early modern culture. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Eckersley, P.P. 1941. The power behind the microphone. London: Cape.

Edgerton, D. 2006. Warfare state: Britain, 1920-1970. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Ehrlich, C. 1990. The Piano: A History. Revised edition. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Emmott, B. 1993. Japanophobia: the myth of the invincible Japanese. New York: Times Books.

Engels, F. 1987 [1845]. The condition of the working class in England. London: Penguin.

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Vaughan, F.L. 1919. “Suppression and non-working of patents, with special reference to the dye and chemical industries.” American Economic Review 9: 693-700.

Vaughan, F.L. 1925. Economics of our patent system. New York: Macmillan.

Vaughn, J. 2008. “The politics of empire: metropolitan socio-political development and the imperial transformation of the British East India Company, 1675-1775.” Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Chicago.

Vergil, P. 2002. On Discovery. Edited and translated by B.P. Copenhaver. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Vickers, S. 2006. “Confronting the new IP threat.” Asia Law, April: 37-8.

“Video bootleggers.” New York Times, October 23, 1982, 41.

A Vindication of the Exclusive Right of Authors to their own Works: A subject now under consideration before the Twelve Judges of England. London: printed for R. Griffiths, 1762.

Vitruvius. 1999. Ten books on architecture. Translated by I.D. Rowland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Walcot, H. 1702. Sea-water made fresh and wholesome. London: for R. Parker.

Walsh, C. 1885. A Bookseller of the last century. London: Griffith et al.

Walters, G. 1974. “The Booksellers in 1759 and 1774: the Battle for Literary Property.” The Library, 5th ser., 29: 287–311.

[Warburton, W.] 1747. A letter from an author, to a member of Parliament, concerning Literary Property. London: for J. and P. Knapton.

Ward, C.C. and R.E. Ward. 1983. “Literary piracy in the eighteenth century book trade: the cases of George Faulkner and Alexander Donaldson.” Factotum 17: 25-35.

Ward, E. 1700. A Journey to H--- (Part II). London: n.p.

[Ward, E.] 1709. The Secret History of Clubs. London: n.p.; sold by the booksellers.

Ward, J.P. 1997. Metropolitan communities: trade guilds, identity, and change in early modern London. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.

Ward, R.E. 1972. Prince of Dublin publishers: the letters of George Faulkner. Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky.

Wark, M. 2004. The Hacker manifesto. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Warner, M. 2002. Publics and counterpublics. New York: Zone.

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Way, P. 1993. Common labour: Workers and the digging of North American canals, 1780-1860. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Wear, A. 2000. Knowledge and practice in English medicine, 1550-1680. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

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Werrett, S. 2007. “Explosive affinities: pyrotechnic knowledge in early modern Europe.” In Making knowledge in early modern Europe: practices, objects, and texts, 1400-1800, edited by P. Smith and B. Schmidt. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

[Wesley, S.] 1716. Neck or Nothing: a consolatory letter from Mr. D-nt-n to Mr. C—rll.  London: sold by C. King.

West, W.J. 1987. Truth betrayed. London: Duckworth.

Westfall, R.S. 1980. Never at Rest: A Biography of Isaac Newton. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Whewell, W. 1834. [Review of Somerville]. Quarterly Review 51 (March): 58-60.

Whewell, W. 1840. Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences. London: J.W. Parker.

White, P. 2003. Thomas Huxley: making the ‘man of science.’ Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Whyte, W.H. 1956. The organization man. New York: Simon and Schuster.

Wiener, N. 1948. Cybernetics: Or Control and communication in the animal and the machine. Paris: Hermann et Cie; New York: Technology Press.

Wiener, N. 1953. Ex-prodigy: my childhood and youth. New York: Simon and Schuster.

Wiener, N. 1954. The human use of human beings: Cybernetics and society. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

Wiener, N. 1956. I am a mathematician: the later life of a prodigy. New York: Doubleday.

Wiener, N. 1959. The Tempter. New York: Random House.

Wiener, N. 1993. Invention: the care and feeding of ideas. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Wile, R.R. 1985. “Record piracy: the attempts of the sound recording industry to protect itself against unauthorized copying, 1890-1978.” ARSC Journal 17:1: 18-40.

Wiley, J., and J. Erickson. 1992. Hard drive: Bill Gates and the making of the Microsoft empire. New York: Wiley.

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Wilson, D.A. 1998. United Irishmen, United States: Immigrant radicals in the early republic. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.

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Woodcroft, B., ed. 1872. Abridgments of specifications relating to Medicine, Surgery, and Dentistry. 2nd ed. London: Office of the Commissioners of Patents for Inventions.

Woodcroft, B., ed. 1881. Abridgments of specifications relating to Brewing, Wine-making, and Distilling alcoholic liquids. London: Office of the Commissioners of Patents for Inventions.

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Yates, J. 1989. Control through communication: the rise of system in American management. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Yeo, R. 1993. Defining science: William Whewell, natural knowledge and public debate in early Victorian Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

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York, N.L. 1985. Mechanical metamorphosis: technological change in revolutionary America. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.

Youmans, E.L., ed. 1865. The correlation and conservation of forces. NY: D. Appleton and Co.

Youmans, E.L. 1873.  The culture demanded by modern life. New York: Appleton.

Zachary, G.P. 1997. Endless frontier: Vannevar Bush, engineer of the American century. New York: Free Press.

Zachs, W. 1995. “John Murray and the Dublin book trade 1770-93; with special reference to the ‘mysterious’ Society of Dublin Booksellers.” Long Room 40 (1995): 26-33.

Zachs, W. 1998. The first John Murray and the late eighteenth-century London book trade. Oxford: Oxford University Press for the British Academy.

Zboray, R.J. 1993. A fictive people: Antebellum economic development and the American reading public. New York: Oxford University Press.

 

 

Miscellaneous Periodicals

 

American Museum 3 (1788).

American Museum 4 (1788).

American Museum 5 (1789).

American Museum 6 (1789).

American Museum 10 (1791).

American Museum 12 (1792).

Bulletin of the New York Public Library 5:8 (August 1901).

Chicago Tribune, October 23, 1981.

Columbian Magazine 1 (September 1786).

Corsair 1:1 (March 16, 1839).

Corsair 1:2 (March 23, 1839).

Corsair 1:4 (April 6, 1839).

Corsair 1:5 (April 13, 1839).

Daily Express, March 22, 1923.

Daily Express, April 5, 1923.

Daily Mail, March 26, 1923.

Daily Mail, April 9, 1923.

Daily Mail April 11, 1923.

Dublin Evening Post, March 11-15, 1734.

Dublin Evening Post, April 3, 1784.

Dublin Evening Post, April 6, 1784.

Dublin Evening Post, April 8, 1784.

Dublin Evening Post, April 10, 1784.

Dublin Gazette, October 9-12, 1742.

Dublin Gazette, April 3-7, 1744.

Dublin Gazette, March 28, 1758.

Dublin Journal, April 12-15, 1735.

Dublin Journal, February 4-7, 1743.

Dublin Journal, September 18-22, 1744.

Dublin Journal, September 22-25, 1744.

Dublin Journal, October 20-23, 1744.

Dublin Journal, July 23-27, 1745.

Dublin Journal, July 26-29, 1746.

Dublin Journal, July 15-18, 1758.

Dublin Journal, August 5-8, 1758.

Dublin Journal, August 12-15, 1758.

Dublin Journal, September 2-5, 1758.

Dublin Journal, August 4-7, 1764.

Dublin Journal, June 2-6, 1767.

Dublin Journal, July 10-13, 1784

Dublin Mercury, September 17, 1742.

Dublin Mercury, May 16-19, 1767.

Dublin Spy, November 5, 1753.

Evening Star, October 30, 1810.

Hibernian Journal, January 22-24, 1773.

Hibernian Journal, February 24-26, 1773.

Homebrew Computer Club Newsletter 2:13 (January 19, 1977).

Liverpool Express, October 15, 1903.

Manchester Evening News, October 7, 1903.

Musical Times, August 1, 1904.

New York Herald Tribune, January 31, 1952.

New York Times, August 4, 1989.

New York Times, January 18, 1990.

Phrack 1:7 (September 25, 1986).

Pittsburg Gazette, July 12, 1828.

Public Gazetteer, February 24-27, 1759.

Publishers Weekly, 1885.

Radical Software 1 (1970).

Record Changer, December 1951.

Scientific American 14:33 (April 23, 1859).

Scientific American new series, 5:11 (September 14, 1861).

Scientific American 5:15 (October 12, 1861).

Scientific review I:1 (March 1865).

Scientific review I:3 (May 1865).

Scientific review I:7 (September 1865).

Scientific review I:8 (October 1865).

Scientific review I:11 (February 1866).

Scientific review II:8 (November 1866).

Scientific review II:9 (December 1866).

Scientific review II:11 (February 1867).

Scientific review IV:6 (June 1869).

Scientific review IV:9 (September 1869).

Scientific review VI:10 (October 1871).

Scientific review VI:6 (June 1871).

Scientific review VII:2 (February 1872).

Scientific review VII:3 (March 1872).

Sheffield Telegraph, December 1, 1903.

The Engineer, August 28, 1861.

The New World 2 (January-July 1841).

The Times, October 20, 1871.

Youth International Party Line 1 (June 1971).

Youth International Party Line 8 (February 1972). 

 


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