Jump to content

Talk:J. M. Dent

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Listing of titles

[edit]

What about a listing of titles produced by J M Dent?

Would that be feasible or not?

Why is there no mention of Le Morte Darthur (illustrated by Aubrey Beardsley in 1892/93) which Dent published in 1893? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 194.95.59.130 (talk) 11:49, 15 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

[edit]

Hello fellow Wikipedians,

I have just added archive links to one external link on J. M. Dent. Please take a moment to review my edit. If necessary, add {{cbignore}} after the link to keep me from modifying it. Alternatively, you can add {{nobots|deny=InternetArchiveBot}} to keep me off the page altogether. I made the following changes:

When you have finished reviewing my changes, please set the checked parameter below to true to let others know.

This message was posted before February 2018. After February 2018, "External links modified" talk page sections are no longer generated or monitored by InternetArchiveBot. No special action is required regarding these talk page notices, other than regular verification using the archive tool instructions below. Editors have permission to delete these "External links modified" talk page sections if they want to de-clutter talk pages, but see the RfC before doing mass systematic removals. This message is updated dynamically through the template {{source check}} (last update: 5 June 2024).

  • If you have discovered URLs which were erroneously considered dead by the bot, you can report them with this tool.
  • If you found an error with any archives or the URLs themselves, you can fix them with this tool.

Cheers.—cyberbot IITalk to my owner:Online 03:56, 13 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Some more info

[edit]

Notes of JM Dent from Jonathan Rose (2001) J.M.Dent b.1849 was another working class autodidact. He saw the canonic ’great works’ as a body of knowledge that anyone could acquire given cheap editions. This realisation occurred when he was part of the Toynbee Hall Shakespeare Society. People were reading from wildly varied editions… He set out to publish 40 standardised volumes of the Temple Shakespeare (1894 - 96) edited by Israel Gollancz and designed to be read aloud. p.132. He followed the success of this with the Temple Classics - 300 of which were published by 1918. He then went on to publish the ground-breaking Everyman Library of English literature with Ernest Rhys as editor launched in 1906. It reached volume 1000 in 1956 with Aristotle’s Metaphysics. In that 50 years the canon of great literature had shifted. Most of this 1000 were out of copyright, though not all. Also the copyright act of 1911 extended author rights for 50 years after their death. This held up the Everyman edition of Middlemarch until 1930. The House of Dent also published proletarian writers (p.135) Thomas Okey, F.C. Boden, Roger Dataller, Rowland Kenney, James Griffiths, Harry Snell. “By 1975 more than 60 million copies of 1,239 Everyman vols had been sold worldwide.” p.135 Certain commercial laws of price and scale helped this success as they favoured books with a long standing reputation and perhaps also some glamour of being classics of the literary class. This was bolstered by the widespread idea that (English) literature could “abolish classes and establish world peace.” Dent certainly seems worthy of a more detailed entry. Szczels (talk) 16:27, 31 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]

[edit]

Prior content in this article duplicated one or more previously published sources. The material was copied from: https://web.archive.org/web/20071028073338/ http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/exhibits/dent/hist.html. Copied or closely paraphrased material has been rewritten or removed and must not be restored, unless it is duly released under a compatible license. (For more information, please see "using copyrighted works from others" if you are not the copyright holder of this material, or "donating copyrighted materials" if you are.)

For legal reasons, we cannot accept copyrighted text or images borrowed from other web sites or published material; such additions will be deleted. Contributors may use copyrighted publications as a source of information, and, if allowed under fair use, may copy sentences and phrases, provided they are included in quotation marks and referenced properly. The material may also be rewritten, provided it does not infringe on the copyright of the original or plagiarize from that source. Therefore, such paraphrased portions must provide their source. Please see our guideline on non-free text for how to properly implement limited quotations of copyrighted text. Wikipedia takes copyright violations very seriously, and persistent violators will be blocked from editing. While we appreciate contributions, we must require all contributors to understand and comply with these policies. Thank you. MrLinkinPark333 (talk) 16:15, 9 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]