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Histoire des libraires et des librairies de l’Antiquité jusqu’à nos jours. Jean-Yves Mollier. Edited by Olivier Deloignon

17.5 × 22 cm 216 pages 35 color illustrations softback march 2021 retail price: 29.90 €

rights sold to uk/usa (the mountain leopard press), italy (e/o edizioni), japan (hara shobo), china (pekin up)

Jean-Yves Mollier is an emeritus professor of contemporary history at Paris Saclay/Versailles Saint Quentin University. A specialist of the history of publishing, books and reading, he has written a number of works: L’Argent et les Lettres. Histoire du capitalisme d’édition (Fayard, 1988), Édition, presse et pouvoir en France au xxe siècle (Fayard, 2008), Une autre histoire de l’édition française (La Fabrique, 2015, 2018 and 2019), Interdiction de publier. La censure d’hier à aujourd’hui (Double Ponctuation, 2020) and he edited three editions of Où va le livre ? (La Dispute, 2000, 2002 and 2007).

(© Serge de Sazo / Gamma-Rapho)

HISTOIRE DES LIBRAIRES ET DES LIBRAIRIES DE L’ANTIQUITÉ À NOS JOURS

THE HISTORY OF BOOKSTORES AND BOOKSELLERS FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE PRESENT DAY

Jean-Yves Mollier Edited by Olivier Deloignon A book designed by SP Millot

An extraordinary artifact, one of the greatest of history’s inventions, a locus for reverie and reflection, the book is above all a commodity: from paper and ink it is manufactured before being funneled down a supply chain to vendors and onto buyers. It may be bought, borrowed, gifted, exchanged or simply stolen. What it contains however may have the power to change the world. Books are children of the mind, trained and tutored with savoir-faire, some promise knowledge, other provoke lassitude in their readers, inside they conserve valuable traces, sparks of creativity or revolution; they may be food for the mind, or a friendly voice who somehow captures our emotional torments. Since Antiquity to the present day, on all continents, passionate men and women have enabled authors to distribute their ideas, knowledge and works, leading readers or listeners of all ages, whether literate or not, into a world of discovery and other cultures. Over the centuries, these transmitters of lore invented a trade and organized themselves into corporations, setting up bookstalls, then vast book emporiums, constantly reinventing their practices. The history of all such businesses is related here starting with the commerce of ideas in markets and forums, sites of exchange open to all, spaces of discovery and freedom, resistance and rebellion, but also of regulation, surveillance and censure. Each seller has very different missions, to appeal to the public, purveyors of fantasy of fiction, or tune into a specialist mission. Their modi operandi are very different: from hawking to press boutiques, independent vendors to emporiums, chainstores and online outlets. The author guides us through the mysteries of a vast cultural industry at the intersection between the world of ideas and of the economy. He meticulously retraces the multifarious meandering paths that take the book to its readers and in doing so, pays an erudite tribute to booksellers, those indispensable “cultural couriers”, who have such an important social role to play, a role even more valuable in an age where the human being is being supplanted by the algorithm.

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