A brisk tour through the history of Western typography, from the time (c.1700 in France and England) when it can be said to have become ‘modern’. A spotlight is directed at different cultures in different times, to trace the developments and shifts in modern typography. Attention is given to ideas, to social context, and to technics, thus stepping over the limited and tired tropes of stylistic analysis. This is a reprint of the second edition, which has some variations in the pictures as well as corrections and updatings in the text.
| availability | in print |
| published | 2010.11.11 |
| extent | 272 pp |
| dimensions | 210 × 125 mm |
| illustrations | colour pictures |
| binding | sewn & flapped paperback |
| ISBN13 | 978-0-907259-18-3 |
| £20.00 |
Preface & acknowledgements
Modern typography
Enlightenment origins
The nineteenth-century complex
Reaction and rebellion
Traditional values in a new world
New traditionalism
Cultures of printing: Germany
Cultures of printing: the Low Countries
New typography
Emigration of the modern
Aftermath and renewal
Swiss typography
Modernity after modernism
Examples
Postscript on reproduction
Sources: commentary
Sources: bibliography
Index






