D.F. McKenzie shows how the material form of texts crucially determine their meanings. He demonstrates that as works are reproduced and reread, they take on different forms and meanings. This is true of all forms of recorded information, McKenzie claims, including sound, graphics, films, landscape and new electronic media. The bibliographical skills first developed for manuscripts and books can, he shows, be applied to a wide range of cultural documents. This book offers a unifying concept of...
A major study of the principles of bibliography by one of the world's foremost scholars of the discipline.
List of illustrations; Foreword; Bibliography and the Sociology of Texts; The Sociology of a text: oral culture, literacy, and print in early New Zealand.