Fr. 205.90

Performing Authorship in Eighteenth-Century English Periodicals

English · Hardback

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Description

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Performing Authorship in Eighteenth-Century Periodicals by Manushag N. Powell embraces periodicals across the first two-thirds of the eighteenth century to argue that this mode of writing, packed with humor and verve, originates the figure of the mass-market author as a literary character. Powell posits that, at the same time, periodicals harbor inescapable doubts as to whether such a character, and by extension their own genre, is sustainable in the long term.

List of contents










Preface
Chapter 1: Author and Eidolon
I.The periodical life cycle
II.The Eidolon
III.Anonymity?
IV.Genre and the public sphere
V.The performance of authorship; readers as spectators
Chapter 2: Early Periodical Cross-Dressing
I.Lucubrations and sexual identity
II.Release the Crackenthorpes: The embattled Female Tatler
III.War on two fronts: The Female Tatler and the British Apollo
Chapter 3: Performance, Masculinity, and Paper Wars
I.The Fielding-Hill Paper War
II.Acting manly in the Covent-Garden Journal
III.John Hill's failure to fight
IV."Female" warriors enter the fray
V.Eidolons on Stage
Chapter 4: Femininity and the Periodical
I.Confirmed bachelors and spinsters: Eidolons and the problem of marriage
II."Below the Dignity of the human Species:" Establishing authority in Montagu and Haywood
III.The Old Maid: Frances Brooke's "Freeborn Briton" versus the coffee-house Connoisseur
IV.Beyond the spinster: Parrots and other Triflers
Chapter 5: No Animal in Nature so Mortal as an Author, or, Death and the Eidolon
I.The genre from Hell? Printers' Devils and News from the Dead
II.Periodicals as monuments, and the hope of resurrection
III.Corpses, plagiarizers of the dead, and other textual revenants: Grub-Street and Defoe
Bibliography

About the author










By Manushag N. Powell

Summary

This book embraces periodicals across the first two-thirds of the eighteenth century to argue that this mode of writing, packed with humor and verve, originates the figure of the mass market author as a literary character. The author posits that, at the same time, periodicals harbor inescapable doubts as to whether such a character is sustainable.

Product details

Authors Manushag N Powell, Manushag N. Powell
Publisher Globe Pequot Publishing Group Inc
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 12.07.2012
 
EAN 9781611484168
ISBN 978-1-61148-416-8
No. of pages 291
Dimensions 160 mm x 234 mm x 15 mm
Weight 650 g
Series Transits: Literature, Thought
Transits: Literature, Thought
Bucknell University Press
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > English linguistics / literary studies
Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > General, dictionaries

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