Editore: Harvard University Library, 2000
Da: Katsumi-san Co., Cambridge, MA, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condizione: Very Good. Issue has some edgewear. 93 p., well illustrated. Oversize [b 727].
Editore: Harvard University Library, Cambridge, 1993
Da: Vashon Island Books, Vashon, WA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Paperback. Condizione: Very Good. First Thus. Features: Melville's prints: the reese collection, by robert K wallace; "Letters Home", by Meredith M. Brown; etc. Size: 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Book.
Editore: Harvard University Library, Cambridge, original journal issue,
Da: Wykeham Books, LONDON, Regno Unito
Rivista / Giornale
EUR 14,06
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPrinted wrappers, 4to, 74 pp., ills, facs. The principal contents are: Teaching Fascism: Schoolbooks of Mussolini's Italy, by Clive Foss; Virgil, Theodore Roosevelt, and John Davis Long: Neighbors in the Widener Stacks, by Richard F. Thomas; Victorian Scholarship and the Addison Manuscript, by J.D. Alsop; and G. W. Cottrell, Jr.: A Memoir, by William H. Bond. With name on front wrapper, wrappers faded the rear wrapper heavily so, contents Good.
Editore: Harvard University Library, Cambridge, original journal issue, 1999, 1999
Da: Wykeham Books, LONDON, Regno Unito
Rivista / Giornale
EUR 16,40
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPrinted wrappers, 4to, 90 pp, plates, facs. How much did playwrights earn from their plays in eighteenth-century London? Granting limitations and major lacunae in the evidence, the lack of serious attention to this question seems surprising. .so far as we are aware, there has been no prior attempt at a systematic analysis. We wish to address several questions. How much did playwrights earn? Did the figure change substantially during the century? How much was it affected by inflation? During what periods could a writer earn his or her living from the theatre? How did women's earnings compare with men's? How well compensated were first plays? What could be earned from afterpieces? How much did publication add to the profits from performance? After a brief section of background and commentary on methodology, we shall review the evidence chronologically, breaking it into logical subdivisions. Incomplete and hazardous as the evidence undeniably is, there is enough of it to permit us to draw some solid conclusions. For the period 1714 - 1800 we have figures for 246 of some 580 mainpieces (roughly 42 per cent), the large majority of them admittedly post - 1750. Afterpieces are more problematical, but hard evidence survives on 118 of 788 cases (15 per cent), most of them after 1750. Very Good.