Howard Jackson is Emeritus Professor of English Language and Linguistics at the School of English at Birmingham City University, UK.
An enormously valuable and instructive starting point for research into lexicography and meta-lexicography; the contributions include helpful and detailed examples, and the relatively compact size of each paper makes the book particularly manageable for students and other researchers. --The Year's Work in English Studies (of the first edition) A strong catalyst for lexicographers of every stripe. It presents contemporary research, summarized for review at a readable scale, with the happy outcome that both specialists and new researchers may reach a clearly contextualized understanding of the trajectories of sub-fields other than their own. --Kernerman Dictionary News (of the first edition) This volume is useful for students who know little about lexicography, or for professors who use lexicons consistently and want to become more aware of the issues involved in approaching them. --Exegetical Tools Quarterly (of the first edition) Beautifully edited and organized. --SKY Journal of Linguistics (of the first edition) An excellent resource that I would strongly recommend for students of lexicography and practitioners alike ... This new edition is a valid and valuable contribution to the library of lexicographic research. --Lexikos The new Bloomsbury Handbook to Lexicography provides students and researchers with a comprehensive and highly accessible overview of a field that has changed dramatically over the last decades. The 25 chapters and more than 800 pages, written by leading dictionary experts from all over the world, are focused on the key issues of dictionary writing and research, and explore the many questions that lexicographers have to solve and metalexicographers to assess. --Henri Bejoint, Emeritus Professor, University Lyon 2, France Howard Jackson has designed the quintessential handbook for insights into dictionary research and metalexicography. With its current revisions and updates, this volume will be an important resource for students and scholars of lexicography for many years to come. --Sarah Ogilvie, Senior Research Fellow in Linguistics, University of Oxford, UK