UID:
edocfu_9959646191902883
Format:
1 online resource (320 pages)
ISBN:
9781316423202
,
1316423204
,
9781107128163
,
1107128161
,
9781107571877
Content:
Literary Coteries and the Making of Modern Print Culture, 1740-1790 offers the first study of manuscript-producing coteries as an integral element of eighteenth-century Britain's literary culture. As a corrective to literary histories assuming that the dominance of print meant the demise of a vital scribal culture, the book profiles four interrelated and influential coteries, focusing on each group's deployment of traditional scribal practices, on key individuals who served as bridges between networks, and on the aesthetic and cultural work performed by the group. Literary Coteries also explores points of intersection between coteries and the print trade, whether in the form of individuals who straddled the two cultures; publishing events in which the two media regimes collaborated or came into conflict; literary conventions adapted from manuscript practice to serve the ends of print; or simply poetry hand-copied from magazines. Together, these instances demonstrate how scribal modes shaped modern literary production.
Note:
Wrest Park and North End: two mid-century coteries -- Formation, fame, and patronage: the Montagu-Lyttelton coterie -- Identity and influence from coterie to print: Carter, Chapone, and the Shenstone-Dodsley collaboration -- Memorializing a coterie life in print: the case of William Shenstone -- "This new species of mischief": Montagu, Johnson, and the quarrel over character -- Transmediations: marketing the coterie traveler -- Literary sociability in the eighteenth-century personal miscellany.
Language:
English
URL:
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