He should take a look at Javier Garcia Liendo's dissertation, "Culturas de masas alternativas" (Princenton U). It is not a history of the paperback book in Latin America, but it contains a lot of information about it.


Jose Eduardo Gonzalez
Associate Prof. of Spanish and Ethnic Studies
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
@jeduardogonz


On 01/23/2015 01:47 PM, Daniel O'Donnell wrote:



-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [SHARP-L] Paperback in Latin America (Libro de bolsillo)
Date: Thu, 22 Jan 2015 23:08:40 +0000
From: Willian Righini de Souza <wrighini@yahoo.com.br>
Reply-To: Willian Righini de Souza <wrighini@yahoo.com.br>
To: sharp-l@list.indiana.edu <sharp-l@list.indiana.edu>


Dear Colleagues,

I am writing to ask for some help / information. Nowadays we can find quite easily books about the paperback history in the United States, England, France and some other European countries. However, I am interested in the development of this market in Latin America. I have material on Brazil and some information about Argentina. I would ask you if you can suggest me some bibliography on other countries or the whole Latin America. Being more specific, I search sources about the ‘libro de bolsillo” in Latin America in the twentieth century.

Best regards,

Willian E. R. de Souza





_______________________________________________
globaloutlookdh-l mailing list
globaloutlookdh-l@uleth.ca
http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/globaloutlookdh-l

You are currently subscribed to this list in NON-digest mode. This means you receive every message as it is posted.

If this represents too much traffic, you can also subscribe in DIGEST mode. This sends out a single email once a day containing the entire day's postings. To change your settings go to http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/options/globaloutlookdh-l You can request a password reminder from this page if you have forgotten yours.