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What a difference a day makes: A British initiative links commerce and culture

What a difference a day makes: A British initiative links commerce and culture LOGOS 212 What a difference a day makes: A British initiative links commerce and culture LOGOS 15/4 © WHURR PUBLISHERS 2004 Alexis Weedon After working in educational publishing, Dr Alexis Weedon took a research fellowship at the Open University on The History of the Book in Britain . She is today principal lecturer at the University of Luton, teaching publishing and new media. She has co-edited the academic journal Convergence: The Journal of Research into New Media Technologies for the past nine years and has recently published Victorian Publishing: The Economics of Book Production for the Mass Market 1836-1916 (Ashgate, 2003). Email: alexis.weedon@luton.ac.uk F o r t h e p a s t f e w y e a r s a l l o v e r B r i t a i n o n a Thursday in March you could have seen children going to school dressed as Hedwig, Harry Potter, Alice in Wonderland or Peter Rabbit. Others were engaged in readathons, entering competitions for s h o r t s t o r i e s , w r i t i n g p o e t r y a n d p http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Logos Brill

What a difference a day makes: A British initiative links commerce and culture

Logos , Volume 15 (4): 212 – Jan 1, 2004

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
© 2004 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0957-9656
eISSN
1878-4712
DOI
10.2959/logo.2004.15.4.212
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

LOGOS 212 What a difference a day makes: A British initiative links commerce and culture LOGOS 15/4 © WHURR PUBLISHERS 2004 Alexis Weedon After working in educational publishing, Dr Alexis Weedon took a research fellowship at the Open University on The History of the Book in Britain . She is today principal lecturer at the University of Luton, teaching publishing and new media. She has co-edited the academic journal Convergence: The Journal of Research into New Media Technologies for the past nine years and has recently published Victorian Publishing: The Economics of Book Production for the Mass Market 1836-1916 (Ashgate, 2003). Email: alexis.weedon@luton.ac.uk F o r t h e p a s t f e w y e a r s a l l o v e r B r i t a i n o n a Thursday in March you could have seen children going to school dressed as Hedwig, Harry Potter, Alice in Wonderland or Peter Rabbit. Others were engaged in readathons, entering competitions for s h o r t s t o r i e s , w r i t i n g p o e t r y a n d p

Journal

LogosBrill

Published: Jan 1, 2004

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