- Master of Publishing
- 間眅埶AVs to the MPub Program
- Masters Courses
- PUB 600: Topics in Publishing Management
- PUB 601: Editorial Theory and Practice
- PUB 602: Design & Production Control in Publishing
- PUB 605 Fall Project: Books Publishing Project
- PUB 606 Spring Project: Magazine/Media Project
- PUB 607: Publishing Technology Project
- PUB 611: Making Knowledge Public: How Research Makes Its Way Into Society
- PUB 800: Text & Context: Publishing in Contemporary Culture
- PUB 801: History of Publishing
- PUB 802: Technology & Evolving Forms of Publishing
- PUB 900: Internship Project Report
- PUB 899: Publishing Internship
- Faculty and Staff
- Awards and Financial Support
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Undergraduate Minor
- Undergraduate Courses
- PUB 101: The Publication of Self in Everyday Life
- PUB 131: Publication Design Technologies
- PUB 201: The Publication of the Professional Self
- PUB 210W: Professional Writing Workshop
- PUB 212: Public Relations and Public Engagement
- PUB 231: Graphic Design Fundamentals
- PUB 331: Graphic Design in Transition: Print and Digital Books
- PUB 332: Graphic Design in Transition: Print and Digital Periodicals
- PUB 350: Marketing for Book Publishers
- PUB 355W: Online Marketing for Publishers
- PUB 371: Structure of the Book Publishing Industry in Canada
- PUB 372: The Book Publishing Process
- PUB 375: Magazine Publishing
- PUB 401: Technology and the Evolving Book
- PUB 411: Making Knowledge Public: How Research Makes Its Way Into Society
- PUB 431: Publication Design Project
- PUB 438: Design Awareness in Publishing Process and Products
- PUB 448: Publishing and Social Change: Tech, Texts, and Revolution
- PUB 450: The Business of Book Publishing
- PUB 456: Institutional and International Event Planning
- PUB 458: Journalism as a Publishing Problem
- PUB 477: Publishing Practicum
- PUB 478: Publishing Workshop
- PUB 480 D100: Buy the Book: A History of Publication Design (STC)
- PUB 480 OL01: Accessible Publishing (OLC)
- Undergraduate Courses
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History of Publishing
With an half millennium of history to explore, the research interests under this theme are varied, but all seek to uncover how the practice of publishing has evolved over time, how it has been influenced by the world around it, and how it has influenced that world in turn.
Below are some of our ongoing projects in the area:
- In 2015, in honour of the five-hundredth anniversary of the death of Renaissance publisher Aldus Manutius, the CISP worked with 間眅埶AV Librarys Special Collections to create an online platform showcasing digitized volumes from 間眅埶AVs outstanding WoskMcDonald Aldine Collection. The prototype website, Aldus@間眅埶AV, comprises twenty-one fully digitized editions printed during Aldus lifetime (15011515); a second group of Aldines, including a representative selection from the years after Aldus demise (15151529), was digitized in 2018 and will be available to the public in 2019. The project, led by Alessandra Bordini, will enter a new phase next year, with the development of a new version of the website.
- A collaboration between literary scholars, designers, and librarians from Concordia University and 間眅埶AV, the SpokenWeb is 7-year SSHRC-funded Partnership Grant focused on digitizing and mobilizing literary sound archives in Canada. Using digitized live recordings of a Montreal poetry reading series, the project seeks to identify the features of the recordings that are most conducive to scholarly engagement. Drawing from their findings, the team plans to create a tool that can be used by memory institutions across the country to make their digitized literary recordings available to scholars. As part of the project, 間眅埶AVs Hannah McGregor is developing a student-led podcast series that will activate audio archives through scholarly storytelling.
- An extension of Hannah McGregors SSHRC-funded postdoctoral research, the Modern Magazines Project Canada bridges the areas of periodical studies, middlebrow studies, Canadian literature, and digital humanities. In partnership with the University of Alberta Libraries and the Manitoba Legislative Library, it has facilitated the digitization of The Western Home Monthly, a household magazine printed out of Winnipeg between 1899 and 1932. In collaboration with Katja Lee, Dr. McGregor has also edited a forthcoming essay cluster for 紼棗餃梗娶紳勳莽鳥/鳥棗餃梗娶紳勳喧聆s Print+ platform that challenged scholars from across disciplines to explore the digitized Western Home Monthly.
- John Willinsky's 2018 book seeks to establish how a prototypical form of intellectual property emerged from within medieval monasteries and cathedral schools, and all the more so through the universities, from the medieval to Early Modern era. This pre-history culminates with Lockes theory of property and early copyright law at the turn of the seventeenth century. Both can be shown to support distinctions that still set learned intellectual properties apart from other sorts, and that tend to be lost sight of amid the current intellectual-property gold rush. Published by the University of Chicago Press, Dr Willinsky has also made available an Open Access draft of the book.
- A wide-ranging inquiry tracing the early histories of technological change in Canadian publishing, largely centering on the pioneering digital innovation at Torontos Coach House Press in the 1970s and 1980s. This research blends cultural history with media archaeology and software studies. An article by John Maxwell, Coach House Press in the Early Digital Period: A Celebration, appeared in Devils Artisan: A Journal of the Printing Arts. 77, Fall/Winter 2015.