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Memoirs of the Nobility, Gentry &c. of Thule: or, The Island of Love. Being a Secret History of Their Amours, Artifices, and Intrigues (in 2 vols.)

Memoirs of the Nobility, Gentry &c. of Thule: or, The Island of Love. Being a Secret History of Their Amours, Artifices, and Intrigues (in 2 vols.) by [Erotic Literature] [Sex Work] Fantosme

4 to 7 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $15.00
Details
$5,500.00
( US$)
Seller: Whitmore Rare Books
Title
Memoirs of the Nobility, Gentry &c. of Thule: or, The Island of Love. Being a Secret History of Their Amours, Artifices, and Intrigues (in 2 vols.)
Author
[Erotic Literature] [Sex Work] Fantosme
Seller
Whitmore Rare Books (United States)
Description
London: Printed for W. Webb, 1742. First edition. Bound to style in 19th century sheep with morocco and gilt to spines. Measuring 168 x 96mm and with occasional mispagination but collating complete: xxiv, 300; [2], 336. Some offsetting to preliminary and terminal leaves and occasional light foxing and marginal chips not affecting text; discreet archival repairs to short tear on pages 115-116 and long tear to 285-286 of volume I preserving all text. Early amateur cloth tape repair to recto of front endpaper to volume II. Pinholes to lower spines of both volumes with minor associated worming to the lower front hinges. A scarce example of early erotic literature centered on London's famous courtesans, ESTC lists only 6 copies with institutions. The present copy aside, the last example to appear at auction was in 1882. Published two years apart, the two volumes of Memoirs of the Nobility are different in their approaches to London's elite, including the infamous Great Impures who hosted the wealthiest men in their parlours and their beds. Volume I launches its readers into a thinly veiled satire, wherein the protagonist Aloisa visits the mythical kingdom of Thule. During her tour on arrival, Aloisa discovers a city of extreme decadence whose cast of characters would be familiar to most Londoners (indeed, the copy housed at the British Museum has contemporary annotations from William Cole, denoting some of the avatars' real-life identities). "there was scarce a Thing as a Virgin of twenty Years of Age to be found in all the Island...all was flaming Lust; and from the Court to the Cottage all had their Share in amorous Intrigues." While sexual violence is rampant in Thule (Aloisa's host, the Chevalier Faire-Franc, informs her of numerous girls assaulted and left pregnant by the son of the new Lord Chancellor, for example), much of the kingdom's activities center on the sex trade. Ambition and wealth drive residents "to get Money, which at Night they as lavishly spend" at various houses of pleasure. In these descriptions, readers visit the brothels of such real-life bawds as Mother Elizabeth Wisebourn (here called Madona), who dresses as a nun to recruit girls and uses medicine and magic to "restore" their virginity and continuously demand the highest prices -- a practice she infamously used to market her girls, particularly Sally Salisbury and Sally Lodge before they rose to success in their own rights. Nearby, Miss Edwards of Kensington (possibly Kitty Fisher or Lucy Cooper) resides "in open Fornication" yet "defies all Scandal." A string of famous men -- authors, dignitaries, and gentry -- are also exposed for their engagement with courtesans, their elopements, and their affairs. By volume II, these details fade and the stories shift toward a more general erotic fantasy. But both notably participate in celebrating and expressing anxiety about the growing power of London's sex trade. With estimates of London's sex workers ranging widely from 8,600-80,000, it was undeniable that a vast portion of the population was engaged in sex-for-money whether as a provider or consumer (Rogers). The money and public influence of courtesans like Kitty Fisher, Lucy Cooper, Sally Salisbury, Sophia Baddeley, Mary Robertson and others highlighted how women who defined traditional marriage economies could carve out their own wealth, independence and community. ESTC T75813. Lowndes 2681. Not in the Register of Erotic Books.
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A group of 18 very rare catalogues issued by this intrepid German bookseller and publisher by GOEBHARDTISCHEN BUCHHANDLUNG

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $20.00
Details
$1,500.00
( US$)
Seller: Jonathan A. Hill, Bookseller, Inc.
Title
A group of 18 very rare catalogues issued by this intrepid German bookseller and publisher
Author
GOEBHARDTISCHEN BUCHHANDLUNG
Seller
Jonathan A. Hill, Bookseller, Inc. (United States)
Description
18 vols. Small 8vo, various orig. wrappers or self-bound. Bamberg & Würzberg: 1809-1818. Joseph Martin Goebhardt (1709-57) founded this bookselling company about 1747,the year he issued his first catalogue. He was succeeded by his son Tobias (1734-94), who capitalized on the demand for Italian and French works, regardless of their contents or the controversy they might cause with German censors. The Goebhardts were among the first in Germany to publish works by Diderot, d’Alembert, Helvetius, etc. Their considerable trade and publication of foreign books made them one of the primary conduits of French-German cultural exchange in the mid-18th century. This caused Bamberg’s censors to investigate them, but they seem to have escaped punishment after Tobias pretended to be unfamiliar with French. Notably, the family served as the official supplier of scholarly books to Bamberg’s university. Tobias’s son Joseph Anton Goebhardt (n.d.) became the head of the company in 1802. Goebhardt was the first publisher of Hegel’s Phänomenologie des Geistes (1807), but soon afterwards the business began to fail, and control was ceded to Joseph’s brother-in-law, Franz Ignaz Heinrich von Hefner (1756-1846), who later sold it to Carl Christian Ettlinger, a local competitor. The present catalogues, each with hundreds of listings, were compiled towards the end of the firm’s existence. This includes a complete set of the monthly catalogues published serially for the year 1817, devoted to literature; it is interesting to note that the Goebhardts maintained their tradition of dealing in French literature. Another set comprises the four issues of the firm’s “Literarischer Anzeiger” for 1818, offering newly published German works. A very interesting collection of scarce German bookseller catalogues from the early 19th century. These come from the Wittelsbach library at Tegernsee, the “summer home” library of the royal family of Bavaria. We are unaware of any institutions or collections outside of Germany with significant runs of Goebhardt catalogues. Sporadic and inoffensive foxing. ❧ Kalliope-Verbund database & M. Häberlein & M. Schmölz-Häberlein, “Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel’s Network in Bamberg” in Bavarian Studies in History and Culture (website), accessed 7 January 2021.