In A martyr to bibliography: A notice of the life and works of Joseph-Marie Quérard, bibliographer, Olphar Hamst offers a concise yet learned account of one of the nineteenth century's great bibliographical minds. The book examines Quérard's labors, achievements, and hardships, situating him within the scholarly culture of French bibliography and the wider nineteenth-century passion for cataloguing, attribution, and literary history.
Written in an informed commemorative style, it combines biographical narrative with critical appreciation, treating bibliography not as mere compilation but as an exacting intellectual discipline shaped by devotion, erudition, and sacrifice. Hamst writes with the evident respect of a scholar attentive to the hidden labor behind literary culture. His interest in Quérard likely arises from a recognition of the bibliographer's foundational role in preserving authorship, textual history, and the infrastructure of knowledge itself.
By focusing on Joseph-Marie Quérard, celebrated for his monumental bibliographical undertakings, Hamst recovers a figure whose painstaking scholarship was indispensable to generations of researchers yet often underacknowledged outside specialist circles. This volume will especially reward readers interested in book history, French literary scholarship, and the history of bibliography. It is recommended as both a tribute to Quérard and a meditation on the scholarly vocation, illuminating the intellectual heroism embedded in bibliographical work.
In A martyr to bibliography: A notice of the life and works of Joseph-Marie Quérard, bibliographer, Olphar Hamst offers a concise yet learned account of one of the nineteenth century's great bibliographical minds. The book examines Quérard's labors, achievements, and hardships, situating him within the scholarly culture of French bibliography and the wider nineteenth-century passion for cataloguing, attribution, and literary history.
Written in an informed commemorative style, it combines biographical narrative with critical appreciation, treating bibliography not as mere compilation but as an exacting intellectual discipline shaped by devotion, erudition, and sacrifice. Hamst writes with the evident respect of a scholar attentive to the hidden labor behind literary culture. His interest in Quérard likely arises from a recognition of the bibliographer's foundational role in preserving authorship, textual history, and the infrastructure of knowledge itself.
By focusing on Joseph-Marie Quérard, celebrated for his monumental bibliographical undertakings, Hamst recovers a figure whose painstaking scholarship was indispensable to generations of researchers yet often underacknowledged outside specialist circles. This volume will especially reward readers interested in book history, French literary scholarship, and the history of bibliography. It is recommended as both a tribute to Quérard and a meditation on the scholarly vocation, illuminating the intellectual heroism embedded in bibliographical work.