
Contents
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Letterpress Giants Letterpress Giants
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Britain’s Printing Unions Britain’s Printing Unions
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Lines of Demarcation Lines of Demarcation
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Newsprint Empires Newsprint Empires
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Amalgamated Press Amalgamated Press
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Harmsworth’s Rivals Harmsworth’s Rivals
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Lord Northcliffe’s Legacy Lord Northcliffe’s Legacy
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3 From Mass Periodicals to Mass Production
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Published:March 2014
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Abstract
This chapter considers the implications for Britain’s magazine industry of the growth in popular daily newspapers during the opening two decades of the twentieth century. It traces the development of trade union activities in the printing industry throughout the nineteenth century, from their origins as craft-based typographical societies to the complex structures incorporating task-based and plant-specific lines of demarcation that had emerged by the early 1900s. Given their common use of letterpress, mass-produced magazines and newspapers displayed a tendency towards technological convergence in printing. This was particularly true of the Harmsworth-owned enterprises, whose Amalgamated Press magazine business operated as part of a publishing empire that encompassed Associated Newspapers and the Daily Mirror. As Alfred Harmsworth (Lord Northcliffe) sought to raise his political profile particularly through his ownership of the Daily Mail, a broadly tolerant approach was adopted towards the growing trade union influence within his London-based factories producing newspapers and pulp magazines.
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