尤物视频

Amanda Lastoria

With her examining committee, from L to R: Stuart Poyntz (Communication), John Maxwell (Publishing), Amanda Lastoria, Michelle Levy (English), Teal Triggs (Royal College of Art), Michael Everton (English).

As soon as Amanda Lastoria was accepted into a master鈥檚 program in publishing at Oxford Brookes University in the U.K., she started searching for a university where she could pursue a PhD. Surprisingly, she couldn鈥檛 find a university in North America offering such a degree. 

Undaunted, she approached 尤物视频, which she knew offered Canada鈥檚 only master鈥檚 program in publishing.  

鈥淚 thought it would be the best school for pioneering a PhD in publishing,鈥 says Lastoria, who had worked at publishing houses in the U.K. and Toronto after completing her master鈥檚 program.

John Maxwell, a publishing professor who is now the director of the SFU program, helped her develop her thesis proposal and joined an interdisciplinary group of supervisors from English, communication and publishing to support her work as SFU鈥檚 first PhD student in publishing. 

The choice to study Alice鈥檚 Adventures in Wonderland for her thesis was strategic. To build a strong case study for researching the evolution of book design and production, Lastoria needed to find a title that had been around for a long time and had a relatively stable text despite changes in packaging over time. 

Her interdisciplinary course work and research drew on bibliography, book history, publishing history, literary theory and her professional experience. She wanted to demonstrate how design and production values can open up new audiences for a book and also alter its meaning. 

Over 150 years of Alice, there have been countless editions published for many different audiences. These include board books for children, graphic novels for teens, leather-bound hardcovers for adults, and even an interactive e-book. For her purposes, Lastoria focused on printed English language editions attributed to Carroll that were published in England or America. She narrowed hundreds of editions down to 46 that she discussed in her dissertation. 

Some of the 46 editions of Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland analyzed by Amanda Lastoria to earn North America鈥檚 first PhD in publishing.

When she went down the rabbit hole, so to speak, Lastoria discovered that author Lewis Carroll had also served as art director for the book. This added to the significance of her research, as she is the first person to recover this aspect of his work. 

During one of her research trips to Oxford and London she also discovered a readymade community of dedicated 鈥淐arrollians.鈥 They devote their lives to studying every obscure detail about Lewis Carroll and Alice鈥檚 Adventures in Wonderland. They welcomed her to join their 150th anniversary boat ride down the River Thames 鈥 retracing a trip that Carroll had made in 1862. 

These 鈥渃olourful characters鈥 have a passion that drives them, says Lastoria. 

鈥淭heir work has been really valuable for my research and I relied on it a lot.鈥 

They told her details about his life and work that clarified her research, such as whether he was involved in the edition published soon after he died. 

At times, completing her PhD may have seemed as elusive as a Cheshire cat but, after eight years and countless hours poring over different versions of Alice, Lastoria is very proud of her accomplishments. 

鈥淚鈥檓 the first person in my family to go to university at all, so it鈥檚 a big deal.鈥  

She continues to forge her own path. She is developing a new course on the history of publication design for the undergraduate publishing minor this summer. She鈥檚 also writing a book based on her doctoral research. With her passion for research and extensive industry experience, Lastoria hopes to continue her work in both areas. 

鈥淢y ultimate goal would be to blend industry and academia.鈥  

To keep up with Amanda鈥檚 research, follow her on Twitter @amandalastoria.