 | The Development of the International Book Trade, 1870-1895: Tangled Networks Release Date: December 7, 2010| ISBN-10: 023027563X | ISBN-13: 978-0230275638An international trade emerged between 1870-1895 that incorporated the circulation of books among countries worldwide. A history of the social network and select agents who sold and distributed books overseas, this study demonstrates agents increasingly thought of the world as a negotiable, connected system and books as transnational commodities. ...
 |  | Dickens and the Invisible World: Fairy Tales, Fantasy, and Novel-Making ...
 |  | The Dime Novel Western Publication Date: June 15, 1978Traces the development of the western dime novel form from its source in early nineteenth-century fiction through to its full manifestation in the late 1800s. Daryl Jones focuses on the development of character types (backwoodsman, plainsman, outlaw, and cowboy), the settings, the structures, and the plots of this form. ...
 |  | The Evolution of English Prose, 1700-1800: Style, Politeness, and Print Culture Publication Date: November 13, 1998| ISBN-10: 0521624320 | ISBN-13: 978-0521624329| Edition: First Edition At the beginning of the eighteenth century ordinary written English was close to speech; by 1800, people expressed themselves more formally, politely, and precisely. The new "writtenness" of prose coincided with the development of a mature print culture, the rise of women writers, the invention of prescriptive grammars, and a powerful new rhetoric.Carey McIntosh traces these changes and illustrates them with comparisons of work by Defoe and Paine, Swift and Burke, Addison and Johnso...
 |  | Experimenting: Essays with Samuel Weber Publication Date: December 15, 2007The work of Samuel Weber has greatly influenced writers and thinkers across the arts and humanities: including literary, critical, and cultural theory; media, communication, theater, and cultural studies; new media and technology; psychoanalysis; and philosophy. His remarkable and inaugural texts have been especially important to the deconstructive tradition, given his early recognition of the importance of the writings of Jacques Derrida. Taught by Theodor W. Adorno and Peter Szondi, he is equally at home in the Critical Theory of the Frankfurt School, in ...
 |  | Constance Fenimore Woolson: Homeward Bound ...
 |  | Historical Dictionary of Postmodernist Literature and Theater (Historical Dictionaries of Literature and the Arts) Publication Date: February 21, 2007| ISBN-10: 0810855984 | ISBN-13: 978-0810855984Postmodernist literature embraces a wide range of forms and perspectives, including texts that are primarily self-reflexive; texts that use pastiche, burlesque, parody, intertextuality and hybrid forms to create textual realities that either run in opposition to or in parallel with an external reality; fabulations that develop both of these strategies; texts that ironize their relationship to reality; works that use the aspects already noted to more fully engage with political or cultural realities; texts t...
 |  | Feminist Literacies, 1968-75 Publication Date: May 2, 2005 In the late 1960s and early 1970s, ordinary women affiliated with the women's movement were responsible for a veritable explosion of periodicals, poetry, and manifestos, as well as performances designed to support "do-it-yourself" education and consciousness-raising. Kathryn Thoms Flannery discusses this outpouring and the group education, brainstorming, and creative activism it fostered as the manifestation of a feminist literacy quite separate from women's studies programs at universities or the large-scale political workings of second-wave feminism. Seeking t...
 |  | Fishing by Obstinate Isles: Modern and Postmodern British Poetry and American Readers (Avant-Garde & Modernism Studies) ...
 |  | George Eliot: The Novels (Analysing Texts (Palgrave MacMillan)) Publication Date: November 8, 2003| ISBN-10: 1403900574 | ISBN-13: 978-1403900579This volume guides students through Eliot's most widely studied novels: The Mill on the Floss, Silas Marner and Middlemarch. The first part of the book is based on analysis of extracts grouped by themes including relationships, society and morality. At the end of each chapter , a "Methods" section offers ideas for independent study. The second part describes Eliot's biographical, cultural and intellectual environment, and gives readings of representative critical writing. ...
 |  | Defining Literary Criticism: Scholarship, Authority and the Possession of Literary Knowledge, 1880-2002 Release Date: February 16, 2006Outlining the controversies that have surrounded the academic discipline of English Literature since its institutionalization in the late nineteenth century, this important book draws on a range of archival sources. It addresses issues that are central to the identity of academic English - how the subject came into existence, and what makes it a specialist discipline of knowledge - in a manner that illuminates many of the crises that have affected the development of modern English studies. Atherton also addresses contemporary arguments about the teaching of lit...
 |  | Cuneiform to Computer Publication Date: March 5, 1998| ISBN-10: 0810832909 | ISBN-13: 978-0810832909Cuneiform to Computer provides a brief history of how reference works developed, but concentrates on how they reflect attitudes of their particular period of publication. Each chapter focuses on a basic reference form and highlights the major titles in its evolution. Stress is on the inter-relationship of reference sources with social change and development. ...
 |  | Consuming Silences: How We Read Authors Who Don't Publish Publication Date: April 25, 2005| ISBN-10: 0820326992 | ISBN-13: 978-0820326993J. D. Salinger was an author in 1951 when he published The Catcher in the Rye. Is he one now? Was Henry Roth an author during the sixty years that separated Call It Sleep, his literary debut, from his second novel, Mercy of a Rude Stream? To show us how silence can be produced and consumed as a literary text, Myles Weber takes a provocative look at four revered authors who battled writer’s block or simply ceased publishing. The careers of Tillie Olsen, Henry Roth, J. D. Salinger, and Ralph Ellison sugge...
 |  | 'Grossly Material Things': Women and Book Production in Early Modern England Publication Date: August 18, 2012| ISBN-10: 0199651582 | ISBN-13: 978-0199651580In A Room of One's Own, Virginia Woolf described fictions as 'grossly material things', rooted in their physical and economic contexts. This book takes Woolf's brief hint as its starting point, asking who made the books of the English Renaissance, and what the material circumstances were in which they did so. It charts a new history of making and use, recovering the ways in which women shaped and altered the books of this crucial period, as co-authors, editors, translators, patrons, printers, booksellers, and...
 |  | El silencio del ayer (Spanish Edition) (Hispanic American Collection) ...
 |  | Constructing Girlhood: Popular Magazines For Girls Growing Up In England, 1920-1950 (Feminist Perspectives on the Past and Present) Publication Date: October 3, 1995| ISBN-10: 0748402861 | ISBN-13: 978-0748402861| Edition: 1 This text explores the contribution of magazines to the social construction of female adolescence during a historical period of rapid change and locates the role of magazines in the lives of contemporary girls. In addressing this theme, the book explores the changing social, economic, political and cultural conditions which shaped, and continue to influence, the experience of girlhood. The author discusses key concepts such as adolescence and "girlhood" and outlines theories concerning the interp...
 |  | The Fallen Angel: Chastity, Class and Women's Reading 1835-1880 Publication Date: January 1, 1981| ISBN-10: 0879721553 | ISBN-13: 978-0879721558| Edition: 1st This book discusses the figure of the unchaste woman in a wide range of fiction written between 1835 and 1880; serious novels by Dickens, Mrs. Gaskell, Meredith, and George Eliot; popular novels that provided light reading for middle-class women (including books by Dinah Craik, Rhoda Broughton, and Ouida); sensational fiction; propaganda for social reform; and stories in cheap periodicals such as the Family Herald and the London Journal, which reached a different and far wider audience than eit...
 |  | Disease, Desire, and the Body in Victorian Women's Popular Novels (Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture) Publication Date: January 13, 1998| ISBN-10: 0521593239 | ISBN-13: 978-0521593236| Edition: 1 Pamela Gilbert argues that popular fiction in mid-Victorian Britain was regarded as both feminine and diseased. She discusses work by three popular women novelists of the time: M. E. Braddon, Rhoda Broughton and "Ouida". Early and later novels of each writer are interpreted in the context of their reception, showing that attitudes toward fiction drew on Victorian beliefs about health, nationality, class and the body, beliefs that the fictions themselves both resisted and exploited. ...
 |  | Eudora Welty: Writers' Reflections upon First Reading Welty Publication Date: April 1999Simply put, Eudora Welty is the greatest living writer of southern fiction. On the occasion of her ninetieth birthday, many of today's most important writers have come together to offer original essays: deeply-personal tributes to her influence on them upon first reading her work. Born in Jackson, Mississippi on April 13, 1909, the first child of Christian and Chestina Andrews Welty, Eudora Welty spent a good part of her childhood with books and fondly recollects her trips to the library and being read to by her parents. After college in Wisconsin and New York Cit...
 |  | Daughter of the Swan: Love and Knowledge in Eudora Welty's Fiction Publication Date: October 1, 1994Readers of Eudora Welty's stories often encounter a protective and domelike nighttime sky, the moon and constellations beckoning a character to venture beyond the familiar, visible world. This striking metaphor for the human need to seek out the unknown serves as an anchoring image in Daughter of the Swan, Gail L. Mortimer's study of Welty's lifelong inquiry into the nature and contexts of knowledge.Mortimer argues that Welty's views on epistemology and the elusiveness of certainty lie at the heart of this writer's subtle and revelatory work. Employing the ps...
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