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E-grāmata: Print Culture Histories Beyond the Metropolis

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Print Culture Histories Beyond the Metropolis focuses attention to how the residents of smaller cities, provincial districts, rural settings, and colonial outposts have produced, disseminated, and read print materials.



Bringing together leading scholars of literature, history, library studies, and communications,Print Culture Histories Beyond the Metropolis rejects the idea that print culture necessarily spreads outwards from capitals and cosmopolitan cities and focuses attention to how the residents of smaller cities, provincial districts, rural settings, and colonial outposts have produced, disseminated, and read print materials.

Too often print media has been represented as an engine of metropolitan modernity. Rather than being the passive recipients of print culture generated in city centres, the inhabitants of provinces and colonies have acted independently, as jobbing printers in provincial Britain, black newspaper proprietors in the West Indies, and library patrons in “Middletown,” Indiana, to mention a few examples. This important new book gives us a sophisticated account of how printed materials circulated, a more precise sense of their impact, and a fuller of understanding of how local contexts shaped reading experiences.

Recenzijas

A discerning look into provincial reading experiences that will offer an extended view of the world for scholars of sociocultural and print historyHighly recommended.

- R.L. Wadham (Choice vol 54:03:2016)

Papildus informācija

"Print Culture Histories beyond the Metropolis transcends a powerful metropolitan focus in print culture studies to shape an argument for the equal treatment of towns in Britain, Ireland, India, the United States, and antipodean outposts as centres of cultural activity. Letters, diaries, reading statistics, and private archives provide the kind of primary data that many print culture scholars crave and envy, and the contributing authors have woven the data into compellingly readable essays." -- Archie L. Dick, Department of Information Science, University of Pretoria
Illustrations and Maps
vii
Acknowledgments ix
Print Culture Histories beyond the Metropolis: An Introduction 3(26)
Patrick Collier
James J. Connolly
Part One Circulation
1 Non-Metropolitan Printing and Business in Britain and Ireland between the Sixteenth and Eighteenth Centuries
29(25)
James Raven
2 "I have hitherto been entirely upon the borrowing hand": The Acquisition and Circulation of Books in Early Eighteenth-Century Dissenting Academies
54(34)
Kyle Roberts
3 The Eighteenth- and Early Nineteenth-Century Evolution of Indian Print Culture and Knowledge Networks in Calcutta and Madras
88(35)
Kenneth R. Hall
4 Beyond the Market and the City: The Informal Dissemination of Reading Material during the American Civil War
123(27)
Ronald J. Zboray
Mary Saracino Zboray
5 Cosmopolitan Ideals, Local Loyalties, and Print Culture: The Career of George Chandler Bragdon in Upstate New York
150(31)
Joan Shelley Rubin
6 What Travels? The Movement of Movements; or, Ephemeral Bibelots from Paris to Lansing, with Love
181(34)
Brad Evans
7 Circum-Atlantic Print Circuits and Internationalism from the Peripheries in the Interwar Era
215(28)
Lara Putnam
Part Two Place
8 At the Dawn of the Information Age: Reading and the Working Classes in Ashton-under-Lyne, 1830-1850
243(25)
Robert G. Hall
9 Uneasy Occupancy: Sarah Grand, The Beth Book, and a Colonial Reader
268(16)
Lydia Wevers
10 Alger, Fosdick, and Stratemeyer in the Heartland: Crossover Reading in Muncie, Indiana, 1891-1902
284(20)
Joel D. Shrock
11 Romance in the Province: Reading German Novels in Middletown, USA
304(27)
Lynne Tatlock
12 Print Culture and Cosmopolitan Trends in 1890s Muncie, Indiana
331(24)
Frank Felsenstein
13 Zones of Connection: Common Reading in a Regional Australian Library
355(20)
Julieanne Lamond
14 Organized Print: Clara Steen and Institutional Sites of Reading and Writing in the American Midwest, 1895-1920
375(18)
Christine Pawley
Secondary Works Cited 393(34)
Contributors 427(2)
Index 429
James J. Connolly is the George and Frances Ball Distinguished Professor in the Department of History at Ball State University.



Patrick Collier is a professor in the Department of English at Ball State University.



Frank Felsenstein is the Reed D. Voran Honors Distinguished Professor in Humanities in the Department of English at Ball State University.



Kenneth R. Hall is a professor in the Department of History at Ball State University.



Robert G. Hall is an assistant professor in the Department of History at Ball State University.