- Book peddler
Book peddlers were
travel lingvendor s ("peddler s") ofbook s. This occupation had its peculiarities in various countries.United States
Book peddlers and evangelicals in early United States
In the country with no single "state-sponsored" religious denomination, travelling evangelists played an important role.whatWalter Friedman, Section "Book Peddlers and Evangelicals" ] Selling pamphlets and books, especially the
Bible , was often an additional source of income for travellingpreacher s. Among the best organized booksellers were theAmerican Bible Society and theAmerican Tract Society , who had significant forces of "colporteur s". "Evangelical preachers pioneered many techniques that salespeople would later adopt."Book canvassers
Door-to-door book peddlers of the 18th and 19th centuries, also known as "book canvassers", used to carry special "sample books", a kind of "preview ", with table of contents, sample illustrations and some text, designed to advertise the book in question.Review of the book by Keith Arbour] Canvassing subscription sales were the only way to deliver books to many rural areas of America.Hawkers (peddlers) were often frowned upon by the law, but book peddlers were treated differently. For example in laws of
Massachusetts andMissouri that imposed penalties for hawkers operating without license, the book peddlers were excluded. [ [http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=156&invol=296 Emert v. Missouri 156 U.S. 296 (1895)] U.S. Supreme Court]Russian Empire
Lithuania
When printing
Lithuanian language books inLatin alphabet was forbidden inRussian Empire , book peddlers, "knygnešiai " in Lithuanian, smuggled the books printed abroad, inLithuania Minor , under the threat of criminalprosecution . This activity played an important role in preservation of theLithuanian culture , and in modernLithuania "knygnešiai" are commemorated in museums, monuments, street names, and their remembrance day.Evangelism
In 1866, the "Society for Distribution of the Holy Scripture in Russia" (“Высочайше утверждённое Общество для распространения Священного Писания в России”) was established in
St. Petersburg , with subsidiaries inMoscow established in early 1880s. [ [http://www.istina.religare.ru/article13.html "Book Peddlers"] , "Truth and Life " magazine, January 1999.] In addition to the initial goal of peddling the Christian literature, they started to arrange religious discussion meetings. Eventually the activities of the society were frowned upon by the administration of the Russian Church for their independence and liberalism and closeness toTolstoyan s. After various restrictions put forth by the infamousOber-Procurator of the Holy SynodKonstantin Pobedonostsev , the activity of the society dwindled.The Seventh-day Adventists, persecuted in Russia, employed
colportage of literature published abroad and smuggled into Russia, under the thread of arrest, fine, and confiscation. [ [http://www.rusoir.ru/print/06/15/index.html Seventh Day Adventists in Russia] ru icon]Japan
The tradition of book peddling traces back to the
Edo period .Taro Aso ,Minister for Foreign Affairs of Japan, in his speech in the "Japan Institute of International Affairs" (2006) describes them as follows.If you look for example at the book lenders of the day, it seems that a single book lender would have over a hundred customers. When a new title was released, the book lenders would put it into a bag and take it round to their customers. The customers would then slice open the seal on the bag to get the latest release. This, incidentally, is where the word for “the latest release,” "fukiri" — literally “seal-slicing” — has its origins, and we still use that word to this day, although in recent years to describe the release of new movies. [ [http://www2.jiia.or.jp/pdf/kouenkai/061130_aso_speech_e.pdf A speech of Taro Aso in the Japan Institute of International Affairs] ]
ee also
*
Chapbook
*Bookmobile Notes
References
*Friedman,Walter A., "Birth of a salesman : the transformation of selling in America" (1962) ISBN 0-674-01298-4 ( [http://www.hup.harvard.edu/pdf/FRIBIR_excerpt.pdf Excerpt onlilne] )
*Arbour, Keith. Canvassing Books, Sample Books, and Subscription Publishers' Ephemera 1833–1951 in the Collection of Michael Zinman. Ardsley, New York: The Haydn Foundation for the Cultural Arts, 1996.ISBN 0-937704-08-3 [http://www.prbm.com/arbourrv.htm Review online]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.