Since it is unlikely that every RBM reader is a committed ephemerist, I shall begin with a few generalities that, I daresay, will be all too familiar to many. The word “ephemera” is Greek in derivation and stems from the words EPI = through and HEMERA = the day, which is why those with a more thorough classical education than I have had pronounce the word ephemera with a long middle “e.” On this particular matter I am firmly with most Americans in saying ephemera (with a short “e”). The word is by no means new, and has long been ...
CITATION STYLE
Twyman, M. (2008). The Long-Term Significance of Printed Ephemera. RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage, 9(1), 19–57. https://doi.org/10.5860/rbm.9.1.294
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