Social Status and the Politics of Printers in Eighteenth-Century
Bordeaux
Authors
Jane McLeod
Abstract
This article examines the social position of printers in Bordeaux in the second half
of the eighteenth century. Printers' wealth, property and family connections are studied.
The argument is that commercial, administrative and demographic expansion, coupled
with the reduction in the number of printing licenses, were ail behind an improvement in
the economic and social position of printers. This permitted printers' children and
relatives to enter the elite in Bordeaux. The relatively high social status and local
connections provided Bordeaux printers with a considerable degree of immunity from
Crown censorship.