Literature and the Marketplace: Romantic Writers and Their Audiences in Great Britain and the United StatesUniversity of Nebraska Press, 1996 - 230 σελίδες Literature and the Marketplace addresses one of the great ironies of nineteenth-century British and American literature: the fact that authors of that era, in voicing their alienation from middle-class readers, paradoxically gave expression to feelings of alienation felt by those same readers. As William G. Rowland Jr. points out, romantic writers "thought of the market as conspiring against 'imagination' (Blake) or 'telling the truth' (Melville)" and consequently felt frustrated with literary institutions. Yet their "frustrations," writes Rowland, "helped to energize romantic work and explain its subsequent and continuing appeal." The book opens with a survey of reading publics in Great Britain and the United States in the early years of the nineteenth century. Rowland then presents individual writers--including Wordsworth, Shelley, Hawthorne, Poe, and Emerson--and their relations to their readers. Finally, Rowland shows how the idea of genius was developed by writers as different as Coleridge, Blake, Whitman, and Dickinson and how that idea evolved as an antidote to the commercial literary marketplace of the nineteenth century. A wide-ranging and provocative book, Literature and the Marketplace describes the relations between important British and American authors and the audiences and publishing industries of their era--relations that were troubled, uncertain, and remarkably productive of literature. |
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... radical sympathies , he here blames the system of publishing and distribution for depressing the artist , not the people who would sup- port the artist if they could . However , the new printing method resulted in books that were as ...
... radical social change adopted by the Chartists nor the escapist dreamer of Arnold and Tennyson . But most Victorian readers incor- porated Shelley by lining up on either side of the division between his social and political radicalism ...
... radical as to deserve the epithet ' millenarian " " ( 216 ) . The difficulties of millenarian politics are , of course , “ almost insuperable " because such politics are not practical . Dawson obscures the difference between practical ...
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in the Nineteenth Century | 17 |
Wordsworth and the Difficulty of Speaking to Men | 39 |
Religious Vocation and Blakes Obscurity | 63 |
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Literature and the Marketplace: Romantic Writers and Their Audiences in ... William G. Rowland Περιορισμένη προεπισκόπηση - 1996 |