Showing posts with label History of the Book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History of the Book. Show all posts

Wednesday, 20 April 2016

More Books That I Am Reading

Image result for george marsden c. s. lewisImage result for john fea the bible causeTwo new books arrived in the mail today. I look forward to reading George Marsden's new biography of C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity. As a member of the C. S. Lewis lecture committee at UTC, I hope to nab George Marsden for our next annual lecture. The other book that I recently received was John Fea's The Bible Cause, which chronicles a history of the American Bible Society. I talk quite about about the American Bible Society in my annual course at UTC on "Religion in American Life," and so I imagine that Fea's work will be very useful for me.

Also, today I noticed that Jonathan Edwards and Transatlantic Print Culture is now available for pre-order on OUP.com and Amazon.com--still waiting on the cover art for the dust jacket and the blurbs.

Monday, 1 February 2016

Book Update

I recently received the production schedule for my forthcoming book, Jonathan Edwards and Transatlantic Print Culture. If all goes well, the book should appear in print sometime in August 2016.

During the time that I submitted the manuscript to OUP in December and now, and between packing for our move to a house that is currently under construction, my twelve-year-old son and I have been having a ball playing our electric guitars. Below is Nathan pretending to be Angus Young.




Tuesday, 15 December 2015

It is Finished!

Image result for antiquarian books
I am happy to report that I finished the manuscript for Jonathan Edwards and Transatlantic Print Culture, turning it in to my publisher. The finished book will consist of five chapters, close to thirty illustrations, and three appendices.

Tuesday, 8 December 2015

Audio Recording of Lecture at TEDS

I see that the Jonathan Edwards Center at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (TEDS) has now released an audio version of my lecture that I gave on October 13, 2015. Click here for the link to my lecture entitled, "Jonathan Edwards and Transatlantic Print Culture."


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Sunday, 15 November 2015

Theology on Tap

Who wouldn't want a free drink and the opportunity to hear a stimulating lecture? If you are in the Chattanooga area on Tuesday, November 24 at 7:30pm, consider stopping in at the Camp House for the next Theology on Tap session. I have the privilege of giving this talk. Below is my abstract.




What difference does the printed word make in the dissemination of ideas? How and why were books published during the eighteenth century? In this talk, UC Foundation Associate Professor of Religion Jonathan Yeager will explain how Jonathan Edwards became an international celebrity because of the way that his books were published. Today we know of Edwards as America's greatest theologian and a leading revivalist during his day, but before the publication of his famous account of an awakening in Northampton, Massachusetts in 1734-35, he was known only regionally as a New England pastor. With the success of Edwards's Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God at London in 1737, he went on to write other landmark publications, including his Treatise Concerning Religious Affections (1746), The Life of David Brainerd (1749), Freedom of the Will (1754), and Original Sin (1758). How did the way that these books were published influence the reception of his ideas? Were some of his books more popular than others, and why? These and other questions will be answered in Dr. Yeager's interactive presentation on "Jonathan Edwards and the Power of Print," the subject of which forms the basis of his forthcoming book with Oxford University Press.

Monday, 2 November 2015

My First Digital Humanities Project

At the annual American Society of Church History meeting at Washington D.C. in January 2014, I presented a paper entitled, "The Role of Samuel Kneeland and Daniel Henchman as Jonathan Edwards's Chief Printer and Publisher in Boston." The chair of the panel that I was on, Catherine Brekus, challenged me to do some extensive work on Jonathan Edwards's subscription lists. I remember my initial feeling of being overwhelmed at the thought of analyzing Edwards's extant subscription lists, each of which contains hundreds of names. I decided to bite the bullet, however, and dive into a detailed analysis of some of Edwards's subscription lists.

One of my intended projects involved creating digitized subscription maps that would show concentrations of subscribers. Early last summer, I approached UTC's GIS manager Andy Carroll with a proposed project to create digital maps of subscription lists that were included in four of Jonathan Edwards's books, Freedom of the Will (Boston: S. Kneeland, 1754), The Great Christian Doctrine of Original Sin Defended (Boston: S. Kneeland, 1758), A History of the Work of Redemption (New York: Robert Hodge, 1786), and A Treatise Concerning Religious Affections (Elizabethtown: Robert Hodge, 1787). We have now completed these maps and are happy to make them available to the public.

This was the process:

Step #1: Plot the subscriptions on Google Maps

This part of the process took a long time. I spent weeks plotting the names of individual American subscribers on Google Maps, and when I wasn't sure where a particular person resided, I used Google Books and other means to try and locate precisely where that individual was living at the time of the publication.

Subscription list for Religious Affections (1787)
This brings me to an important caveat for these maps: I was not able to plot every single subscriber, and I only plotted the names of people living in America (not Britain). Because some names on these subscription lists did not offer their place of residence, and there were a few common names (such as John Smith) that would be impossible to find information about, I did not plot them. The good news, however, is that I was able to plot over 90% of the subscribers using all the available resources that I had at my disposal. Overall, the maps provide an accurate picture of the concentrations of subscribers for each of the four subscription lists. One final note. Andy Carroll and I are still making a few adjustments to some of the plotted points on the websites that we have created. For the most accurate picture, please continue to check our maps for updates.

Step #2: Turn the Google Maps that I created over to Andy Carroll at UTC

At first Andy tried to use a "honeycomb" grid system to convert my Google Maps to digital forms, but we decided to abandon this initial software program. The major problem here is that the software program that he tried using pulled subscribers to the center of the nearest honeycomb, many times skewing the representative numbers for a particular area. One example is Boston. Because Boston was not located in the middle of a grid point, but rather was the site of a convergence of three honeycomb grid borders, the subscribers in the town were pushed out of the center of the town to locations on the outskirts. Another problem emerged when subscription points on coastal towns were pulled to a grid out on the water, making it appear as though subscribers could be found on parts of the Atlantic Ocean!




Ultimately, Andy settled on heat maps to convert the plotted points on my Google Maps. Below are the links for each of the subscription lists. Simply click on one of the titles, and it will take you to a heat map that we created.