Women's Authorship and Editorship in Victorian Culture:...

Women's Authorship and Editorship in Victorian Culture: Sensational Strategies

Beth Palmer
你有多喜歡這本書?
文件的質量如何?
下載本書進行質量評估
下載文件的質量如何?
This book considers the ways in which women writers used the powerful positions of author and editor to perform conventions of gender and genre in the Victorian period. It examines Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Ellen Wood, and Florence Marryat's magazines (Belgravia, Argosy, and London Society respectively) alongside their sensation fiction to explore the mutually influential strategies of authorship and editorship.
The relationship between sensation's success as a popular fiction genre and its serialisation in the periodical press was not just reciprocal but also self-conscious and performative. Publishing sensation in Victorian magazines offered women writers a set of discursive strategies that they could transfer onto other cultural discourses and performances. With these strategies they could explore, enact, and re-work contemporary notions of female agency and autonomy, as well as negotiate contemporary criticism. Combining authorship and editorship gave these middle-class women exceptional control over the shaping of fiction, its production, and its dissemination.
By paying attention to the ways in which the sensation genre is rooted in the press network this book offers a new, broader context for the phenomenal success of works like Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Lady Audley's Secret and Ellen Wood's East Lynne. The book reaches back to the mid-nineteenth century to explore the press conditions initiated by figures like Charles Dickens and Mrs Beeton that facilitated the later success of these sensation writers. By looking forwards to the New Woman writers of the 1890s the book draws conclusions regarding the legacies of sensational author-editorship in the Victorian press and beyond.
年:
2011
出版商:
Oxford University Press
語言:
english
頁數:
256
ISBN 10:
0199599114
ISBN 13:
9780199599110
系列:
Oxford English Monographs
文件:
PDF, 1.58 MB
IPFS:
CID , CID Blake2b
english, 2011
線上閱讀
轉換進行中
轉換為 失敗

最常見的術語