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The Library and the Garden

Letchworth Garden City and the Origins of Everyman’s Library
  • Ingo Berensmeyer
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Band 79 2024
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Abstract

This article explores connections between J. M. Dent’s Everyman’s Library series (established in 1906) and its place of production, Letchworth Garden City (founded in 1903). I argue that they extend beyond economic considerations, and that the ideas underpinning the series and its design relate to the social utopia of the Garden City as envisioned in Ebenezer Howard’s Tomorrow: A Peaceful Path to Real Reform (1898) as well as to nineteenth-century social reform movements. Dent’s series introduced a new economy of scale to publishing, fusing an artisanal appearance and high-quality design with industrial mass production and warehousing. This melding of tradition and modernity aligns with the ethos of the Garden City and Howard’s concept of the »Three Magnets« Understanding the ideological foundations of Everyman’s Library sheds new light on this significant episode in the history of British publishing.

Abstract

This article explores connections between J. M. Dent’s Everyman’s Library series (established in 1906) and its place of production, Letchworth Garden City (founded in 1903). I argue that they extend beyond economic considerations, and that the ideas underpinning the series and its design relate to the social utopia of the Garden City as envisioned in Ebenezer Howard’s Tomorrow: A Peaceful Path to Real Reform (1898) as well as to nineteenth-century social reform movements. Dent’s series introduced a new economy of scale to publishing, fusing an artisanal appearance and high-quality design with industrial mass production and warehousing. This melding of tradition and modernity aligns with the ethos of the Garden City and Howard’s concept of the »Three Magnets« Understanding the ideological foundations of Everyman’s Library sheds new light on this significant episode in the history of British publishing.

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