Graphic Arts | Rare Books and Special Collections | Princeton University Library
Unseen Hands: Women Printers, Binders and Book Designers    
      thumbnail gallery   Name   Occupation   Timeline  

 

18th & 19th Century Occupations for Women in the Bookmaking Industry

Of the forty-three occupations for women included in the 1851 publication, Life in New York, six were related to the bookmaking industry: "The Book Folder," "The Book Sewer," "The Gold Leaf Packer," "The Press Feeder," "The Print Colorer," and "The Type Rubber." If the descriptions of these activities made them sound almost unimaginably tedious, they nevertheless represented an improved situation for many women who toiled in other tasks featured in the book, such as "The Wool Picker" or "The Chambermaid."

These particular aspects of bookmaking -- folding, sewing, applying gold leaf, cleaning type -- and their obvious relation to traditional female activities -- had long been the province of women. The illustration from Diderot’s Encylopédie, Plate I, "Fonderie en Caractères" shows women "dressing type," that is removing superfluous metal from the cast letters, as early as the eighteenth century. "The Type Founder," from The Panorama of Professions and Trades, published in 1836, shows women in the back room, their bonnets on the wall, engaged in this same activity, as does "The Type Rubber" in the 1851 publication, Life in New York.

In the vignettes of a typical American printing establishment portrayed on the cover of Scientific American for October 2, 1880, women workers are included, but again they are shown engaged in tasks conventionally associated with female labor: folding, gathering, embossing, and sewing books in a binding frame.

18th & 19th Century Occupations for Women in the Bookmaking Industry

Encyclopédie, ou Dictionnaire Raisonné des Sciences, des Arts et des Métiers , 3d ed., Genève: J. L. Pellet, 1778-1779.
Graphic Arts Division

The Panorama of Professions and Trades; or, Every Man’s Book

The Panorama of Professions and Trades; or, Every Man's Book, by Edward Hazen. Philadelphia: Uriah Hunt, 1836.
Graphic Arts Division. Gift of Sinclair Hamilton, Class of 1906

 

Life in New York, In Doors and Out of Doors

Life in New York, In Doors and Out of Doors, by William Burns. New York: Bunce & Brother, 1851.
Graphic Arts Division

 

Book-Making -- The American Book Exchange: Scientific America 43, no. 14.

"Book-Making -- The American Book Exchange" Cover illustration for Scientific American 43, no. 14, n.s. (October 2, 1880).
Graphic Arts Division


 
 
 

Princeton University Library, Graphic Arts Collection
Rebecca W. Davidson, Curator of Graphic Arts
davidson@princeton.edu
Tel: (609) 258-3197
Last Modified: February 13, 2004