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E-grāmata: Print Culture and the Blackwood Tradition

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In late 1804, William Blackwood established a small publishing and bookselling firm in Edinburgh. Over the next 175 years, William Blackwood & Sons became one of the leading publishers in Britain, enjoying both local and international success. Early on it championed the works of Scottish writers, and later gained acclaim as the publisher of G.W. Steevens, George Eliot, Charles Whibley, and Joseph Conrad. Its political influence was also widespread; in 1817 it founded the monthly Blackwood's Magazine, which featured literary, critical, political, and journalistic commentary and analysis, and was a powerful force in British conservative politics.

Two hundred years after the founding of this significant influence on British literary, political, and social history, this collection of essays reappraises the place of the Blackwood firm and its magazine in literary and print culture history. Editor David Finkelstein brings together an array of eminent scholars and critics from the US, Canada, Scandinavia, and the UK to examine Blackwoods from a variety of interdisciplinary perspectives. The resulting collection covers an impressive range of subject areas, including Romantic and Victorian literature, print culture, media history, and New Journalism.

Papildus informācija

Winner of Robert Colby Memorial Book Prize 2007 (Canada).
List of Illustrations vii
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 3
DAVID FINKELSTEIN
SCOTTISH BEGINNINGS
William Blackwood and the Dynamics of Success
21
ROBERT MORRISON
'The mapp'd out skulls of Scotia': Blackwood's and the Scottish Phrenological Controversy
49
JOHN STRACHAN
Blackwood's and Romantic Nationalism
70
IAN DUNCAN
Blackwood's Subversive Scottishness
90
CHARLES SNODGRASS
CONSOLIDATING REPUTATIONS
'On behalf of the Right': Archibald Alison, Political Journalism, and Blackwood's Conservative Response to Reform, 1830-1870
119
MICHAEL MICHIE
Editing Blackwood's; or, What Do Editors Do?
146
ROBERT L. PATTEN AND DAVID FINKELSTEIN
Maga, the Shilling Monthlies, and the New Journalism
184
LAUREL BRAKE
PRESERVING STATUS
At the Court of Blackwood's: In the Kampong of Hugh Clifford
215
LINDA DRYDEN
'A sideways ending to it all': G.W. Steevens, Blackwood, and the Daily Mail
236
LAURENCE DAVIES
The Muse of Blackwood's: Charles Whibley and Literary Criticism in the World
259
STEPHEN DONOVAN
Appendix 287
Bibliography 291
Contributors 309
Index 313


David Finkelstein is a research professor of media and print culture at Queen Margaret University College in Edinburgh.