Literature in the Marketplace: Nineteenth-Century British Publishing and Reading Practices: 5 (Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture, Series Number 5)
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Revised ed., 1/12/2008
EAN 9780521893930, ISBN10: 0521893933
Paperback, 356 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.3 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English
This wide-ranging and innovative collection of essays addresses important issues in cultural studies and the history of the book. Multidisciplinary in approach, the essays consider different aspects of the production, circulation, and consumption of printed texts throughout the nineteenth century. Topics studied include market trends, modes of publication, the use of pseudonyms by women writers, readerships and reading ideologies, and copyright law; and the book examines a wide range of printed materials, from valentines, advertisements, illustrations, and fashionable annuals, to the more traditional literary genres of poetry, fiction and periodical essays. The authors under discussion include Dickens, the Brontës, George Eliot, Meredith, and Walter Pater. Contributors draw on speech-act, reader-response, and gender theory in addition to various historical, narratological, materialist, and bibliographical perspectives.
1. Introduction
publishing history as hypertext John O. Jordan and Robert L. Patten
2. Some trends in British book production 1800–1919 Simon Eliot
3. Wordsworth in The Keepsake, 1829 Peter J. Manning
4. Copyright and the publishing of Wordsworth 1850–1900 Stephen Gill
5. Sam Weller's Valentine J. Hillis Miller
6. Serialised retrospection in The Pickwick Papers Robert L. Patten
7. Textual/sexual pleasure and serial publication Linda K. Hughes and Michael Lund
8. The disease of reading and Victorian periodicals Kelly J. Mays
9. How historians study reader response
or, what did Jo think of Bleak House? Jonathan Rose
10. Dickens in the visual market Gerard Curtis
11. Male pseudonyms and female authority in Victorian England Catherine A. Judd
12. A bibliographical approach to Victorian publishing Maura Ives
13. The 'wicked Westminster', the Fortnightly, and Walter Pater's Renaissance Laurel Brake
14. Serial fiction in Australian colonial newspapers Elizabeth Morrison
Index.