The British publishing industry in the Nineteenth Century. Volume IV, Publishers, markets, readers / edited by David Finkelstein and Andrew Nash.

The British publishing industry in the Nineteenth Century.
Erişim Adresi
Taylor & Francis Link
OCLC metadata license agreement Link
ISBN
9781003099635 (electronic bk.)
1003099637 (electronic bk.)
9780367568467
9781003823575 (electronic bk. : PDF)
1003823572 (electronic bk. : PDF)
9781003823629 (electronic bk. : EPUB)
1003823629 (electronic bk. : EPUB)
Dil Kodu
İngilizce
Yayın Bilgisi
Abingdon : Routledge, 2024.
Fiziksel Niteleme
1 online resource (xxviii, 416 pages)
İçindekiler Notu
Volume 4: Publishers, Markets, ReadersVolume 4 IntroductionBibliographyPart 1. THE PRICE OF BOOKS Charles Knight, The Old Printer and the Modern Press (London: John Murray, 1854), pp. 238-58. ⁰́₈Literature for the People⁰́₉, Times (9 Feb 1854), p. 10.⁰́₈Cheap Books and their Readers: An Interview with Mr Routledge⁰́₉, Pall Mall Gazette (19 Nov 1885), pp. 1-2.⁰́₈Shilling Literature⁰́₉, Time (July 1885), 115-7. ⁰́₈The New Departure in Publishing: A Six-shilling Novel for Sixpence⁰́₉, Publishers⁰́₉ Circular (13 May 1899), pp. 519-20. A.D. Innes, ⁰́₈The Production and Purchase of Books⁰́₉. Paper delivered to the Third International Congress of Publishers, London 7-10 June 1899 (London : Printed for the Organising Committee by Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1899). ⁰́₈The Booksellers on the Question of Cheaper Books⁰́₉, Academy (21 May 1898), 558-9.Wm Laird Clowes, ⁰́₈The Cheapening of Useful Books⁰́₉, Fortnightly Review (July 1901), 88-98.W. T. Stead, ⁰́₈The World⁰́₉s Classics; or Bound Books for the Million⁰́₉, Review of Reviews (November 1901), 544-6. Part 2. THE CIRCULATION OF BOOKS James Grant, extract from The Great Metropolis, second series (London: Saunders and Otley, 1837), I, pp. 121-40.Charles Knight, extract from The Old Printer and the Modern Press (London: John Murray, 1854), pp. 260-9. ⁰́₈The Circulation of Modern Literature⁰́₉, Spectator (3 Jan 1863), pp. 16-18.⁰́₈The Publications of a Year⁰́₉, Leisure Hour (21 March 1863), 190-2.Walter Montagu Gattie, ⁰́₈What English People Read⁰́₉, Fortnightly Review (September 1889), 307-21.Joseph Ackland, ⁰́₈Elementary Education and the Decay of Literature⁰́₉, Nineteenth Century (March 1894), pp. 412-23.⁰́₈Do English People Buy Books?⁰́₉ The Author, 1 (16 March 1891), pp. 288-91. Part 3. POPULAR PUBLISHING AND READING Thomas Frost, ⁰́₈Popular Literature Forty Years Ago⁰́₉, in Forty Years Recollections (London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, and Rivington, 1880), pp. 77-95.Charles Manby Smith, ⁰́₈The Press of the Seven Dials⁰́₉, Chambers⁰́₉s Journal (28 June 1856), pp. 401-5.Report of the Select Committee on Newspaper Stamps (1851), pp. 371-80. ⁰́₈Literature of the People-Past and Present⁰́₉, Athenaeum (1 January 1870), pp. 11-14. William Alexander, ⁰́₈Literature of the People ⁰́₃ Past and Present⁰́₉, Good Words (Dec 1876), pp. 92-6.[Francis Hitchman], ⁰́₈Penny Fiction⁰́₉, Quarterly Review (July 1890), pp. 150-71. Part 4. RAILWAY BOOKSTALLS [⁰́₈The New Business in Bookselling⁰́₉], Athenaeum (27 January 1849), p. 95.Literature of the Rail: Re-published, by permission, from "The Times" of Saturday 9th August 1851, with a preface (London: John Murray, 1851).⁰́₈Railroad Bookselling⁰́₉, Saturday Review (31 January 1857), pp. 100-2.⁰́₈Our Modern Mercury⁰́₉, Once a Week (2 February 1861), pp. 160-3.⁰́₈W.H. Smith & Son⁰́₉s⁰́₉, Ludgate Monthly (January 1892), pp. 161-9.⁰́₈The Harmsworth Magazine: Some Interviews⁰́₉, Academy (16 July 1898), pp. 67-8⁰́₈The Bookstall Monopoly⁰́₉, Graphic (23 July 1898), p. 58. Part 5. PERIODICAL MARKETS ⁰́₈The Edinburgh Review (1802-1902)⁰́₉, Edinburgh Review, CCCCII (October 1902), pp. 275-80; 284-86, 287-91, 295-96.⁰́₉Publishing and Puffing⁰́₉, Metropolitan Magazine (Oct 1833), 171-8.[Christian Isobel Johnstone], ⁰́₈Johnstone⁰́₉s Edinburgh Magazine⁰́₉, Tait⁰́₉s Edinburgh Magazine (January 1834), pp. 490-500. ⁰́₈Chambers⁰́₉s Edinburgh Journal⁰́₉, Chambers⁰́₉s Edinburgh Journal (1 February 1834), pp. 1-2. George M. Smith, ⁰́₈Our Birth and Parentage⁰́₉, Cornhill Magazine (January 1901), pp. 4-17. William Westall, ⁰́₈Newspaper Fiction⁰́₉, Lippincott's Monthly Magazine (June 1890), pp. 77-88. ⁰́₈Popular Magazines, Circulating Libraries, and the Sale of Books⁰́₉, Bookman (June 1898), pp. 67-70.Part 6. CIRCULATING LIBRARIES AND THE FICTION MARKET Charles Knight, extract from The Old Printer and the Modern Press (London: John Murray, 1854), pp. 229-34.Catherine Gore, 'The Monster Misery of Literature', Blackwood's Magazine (May 1844), pp. 556-60.⁰́₈New and Cheap Forms of Popular Literature⁰́₉, Eclectic Review (July 1845), pp. 74-84.⁰́₈Mudie's Library⁰́₉, Leisure Hour (March 1886), pp. 187-9. William C. Preston, ⁰́₈Mudie's Library⁰́₉, Good Words (December 1894), pp. 668-76⁰́₈Mr Mudie's Monopoly⁰́₉, Literary Gazette (29 September 1860), article and selected subsequent correspondence. [Original article, 29 September; letter from Mudie to the Athenaeum, 6 October; letter from ⁰́₈Z⁰́₉, 6 October; letter from Fair Play, 20 October; letter from ⁰́₈Senex⁰́₉, 27 October; ⁰́₈Mudie⁰́₉s Library⁰́₉, Saturday Review, 3 November; letters from Saunders, Otley and A Second-Rate Author, 17 November; letter from Charles J. Skeet, 24 November]. ⁰́₈A Novel ⁰́₃ One Guinea and a Half⁰́₉, Saturday Review (11 November 1871), pp. 615-16. Samuel Tinsley, ⁰́₈Three-Volume Novels⁰́₉, letter to the Times (4 December 1871). ⁰́₈On the Forms of Publishing Fiction⁰́₉, Tinsley's Magazine (May 1872), pp. 411-14.Alexander Innes Shand, ⁰́₈The Novelists and their Patrons⁰́₉, Fortnightly Review (July 1886), pp. 23-35.⁰́₈The Circulating Libraries and Three-Volume Novels⁰́₉, Publishers' Circular (7 July 1894), pp. 5, 7-8⁰́₈The Three-Volume Novel⁰́₉, The Author 5:3 (1 August 1894), pp. 63-5.Part 7. OBSCENITY LAW AND THE BOOK TRADE Extract from ⁰́₈Second Reading in the House of Lords of the Sale of Obscene Books Prevention Bill⁰́₉, Hansard, HL vol. 146 (25 June 1857), cols 329-337. The Case of ⁰́₈The Confessional Unmasked⁰́₉. Being a Report of the Proceedings at Wolverhampton, and in the Court of Queen⁰́₉s Bench, in the Matter of the Appeal ⁰́₈Scott v. Justices of Wolverhampton⁰́₉ (London: A. Gadsby, 1868), pp. 36-48.Extract from The National Vigilance Association, Pernicious Literature. Debate in the House of Commons. Trial and conviction for sale of Zola's novels. With opinions of the press (London: National Vigilance Association, [1889]), pp. 5-19.Index
Özet, vb.
This volume documents how the nineteenth-century British publishing industry responded to and helped shape changes in readership and reading markets in the period. Focusing on broad social, economic and cultural changes, it traces the impact of improvements in transport and communication networks, which dramatically affected the production, distribution and retail of books and periodicals, and the implementation of the Education Acts of 1870 and 1871 which forced publishers to direct their attention to new markets and adopt cheaper publishing formats. The growth of circulating libraries, the revolution in serial and part publication, and the spread of railway bookstalls are among the many topics addressed in this volume which concludes with a section that documents the new pressures of censorship that arose as educational reforms provoked anxieties over the spread of cheap ⁰́₈pernicious⁰́₉ literature.
Konu
HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain __ bisacsh
Publishers and publishing __ Great Britain __ History __ 19th century.
Publishers and publishing __ Great Britain __ History __ 20th century.
Veritabanı