om various quarters. I gratefully acknowledge funding received from
the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada and the
Advisory Research Council of Queen’s University. I am equally grateful
for the support of the Department of English at Carleton University.
The New Scholars Prize of the Bibliographical Society of America allowed
me to present my work to a meeting of that august institution
in New York, and the Bibliographical Society of Canada not only supported
my participation in a number of key conferences but also served
as an intellectual home.
Many librarians, archivists, and rare book dealers were of indispensable
assistance. I wish especially to thank the staff of the Thomas Fisher
Rare Book Library at the University of Toronto; the United Church /
Victoria University Archives; the Wilson Library at the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Library and Archives Canada; the W.D.
Jordan Special Collections and the Archives at Queen’s University;
the National Archives of the United Kingdom; the Elizabeth Dafoe
Library at the University of Manitoba; the William Ready Division of
Archives and Special Collections at McMaster University; the Archives
and Special Collections at the University of Guelph; and David Mason
Books of Toronto. The history of publishing depends on the outstanding
work of collecting and preserving rare books in their original form
and the various papers associated with them.