Periodicals, Fiction and the Novel, 1700-1760: Ecologies of Print
The essay-periodical and the novel both emerged as new literary genres in the eighteenth century. Yet there has been no full-length study of the formative role each genre played in the development of the other. This book uses the lens of periodical studies to reassess what we know about the history of prose fiction, examining how periodicals shaped fictionality and how they were influenced by it in return. It moves the dial on studies of the English novel, arguing that the vibrant interchange between these genres revolutionised the printed world. Over five chapters that contextualise key authors within London’s cutthroat print marketplace, the book studies the idea of ‘print ecologies’ to explain the mutual dependence of the periodical and prose fiction, disrupting the often-held assumption that the novel emerges from this period sui generis.
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Periodicals, Fiction and the Novel, 1700-1760: Ecologies of Print
The essay-periodical and the novel both emerged as new literary genres in the eighteenth century. Yet there has been no full-length study of the formative role each genre played in the development of the other. This book uses the lens of periodical studies to reassess what we know about the history of prose fiction, examining how periodicals shaped fictionality and how they were influenced by it in return. It moves the dial on studies of the English novel, arguing that the vibrant interchange between these genres revolutionised the printed world. Over five chapters that contextualise key authors within London’s cutthroat print marketplace, the book studies the idea of ‘print ecologies’ to explain the mutual dependence of the periodical and prose fiction, disrupting the often-held assumption that the novel emerges from this period sui generis.
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Periodicals, Fiction and the Novel, 1700-1760: Ecologies of Print

Periodicals, Fiction and the Novel, 1700-1760: Ecologies of Print

by Jennifer Buckley
Periodicals, Fiction and the Novel, 1700-1760: Ecologies of Print

Periodicals, Fiction and the Novel, 1700-1760: Ecologies of Print

by Jennifer Buckley

Hardcover

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Overview

The essay-periodical and the novel both emerged as new literary genres in the eighteenth century. Yet there has been no full-length study of the formative role each genre played in the development of the other. This book uses the lens of periodical studies to reassess what we know about the history of prose fiction, examining how periodicals shaped fictionality and how they were influenced by it in return. It moves the dial on studies of the English novel, arguing that the vibrant interchange between these genres revolutionised the printed world. Over five chapters that contextualise key authors within London’s cutthroat print marketplace, the book studies the idea of ‘print ecologies’ to explain the mutual dependence of the periodical and prose fiction, disrupting the often-held assumption that the novel emerges from this period sui generis.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781399527453
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 03/31/2025
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.00(d)

About the Author

Jennifer Buckley is a Postdoctoral Researcher in the School of English, Media and Creative Arts at the University of Galway. She currently works on the European Research Council project ‘Theatronomics: The Business of Georgian Theatre, 1732–1809.’ She is the co-editor, with Montana Davies-Shuck, of Character and Caricature, 1660–1820 (2024).

Table of Contents

Abbreviations
Acknowledgements

Introduction: Ecologies of Fiction
1. Cultivating a Genre: Tatlers, Spectators and Spies
2. Daniel Defoe: Conversations with the Eidolon
3. Eliza Haywood: Mediation and Inductive Reading
4. Henry Fielding: Curating Taste
5. Samuel Johnson: The Anxieties of a Periodical Writer
6. Charlotte Lennox: Museums of Fiction
Coda: Magazines and Miscellanies

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