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The Novelty of Newspapers: Victorian Fiction After the Invention of the News
 
 
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The Novelty of Newspapers: Victorian Fiction After the Invention of the News [Hardcover]

Matthew Rubery (Author)

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Book Description

0195369262 978-0195369267 July 28, 2009
Rapid industrialization and new advances in technology marked the Victorian period as one of prodigious socio-cultural change. Chief among the many transformations of quotidian life was the swift and widespread dissemination of information made possible by the emergence of the daily newspaper, an unprecedented new media. The changes it wrought in politics, history, and advertising of the age have all been well-documented. But its influence on one area remains overlooked: the Victorian novel. Redressing this oversight, The Novelty of Newspapers highlights the variety of ways the changing world of nineteenth-century journalism shaped the period's most popular literary form.

Arising in the 1800s and soon drawing a million readers a day, the commercial press profoundly influenced the work of Bront�, Braddon, Dickens, Conrad, James, Trollope, and others who mined print journalism for fictional techniques. Five of the most important of these narrative conventions-the shipping intelligence, personal advertisement, leading article, interview, and foreign correspondence-show how the Victorian novel is best understood alongside the simultaneous development of newspapers. In highly original analyses of Victorian fiction, this study also captures the surprising ways in which public media enabled the expression of private feeling among ordinary readers: from the trauma caused by a lover's reported suicide to the vicarious gratification felt during a celebrity interview; from the distress at finding one's behavior the subject of unflattering editorial commentary to the apprehension of distant cultures through the foreign correspondence.

Combining a wealth of historical research with a series of astute close readings, The Novelty of Newspapers breaks down the assumed divide between the epoch's literature and journalism and demonstrates that newsprint was integral to the development of the novel.

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Editorial Reviews

Review


"In exploring what the nineteenth-century novel learned from the newspapers, Matthew Rubery also uncovers how private lives unfolded in a changing public sphere. Sensitive to feeling, attentive to form, The Novelty of Newspapers exemplifies the study of print culture at its very best."-Amanda Claybaugh, Columbia University


"Matthew Rubery's stylish, lively and richly researched book obliges us to re-examine Walter Benjamin's claim that the rise of the commercial newspaper press, which championed an impoverished utilitarian idea of 'communicable experience,' did lasting damage to the novel. By showing us how complex, inventive, and fraught the crossover between the novel and the press was in the late Victorian period, Rubery not only sheds new light on Braddon, Eliot, James, Thackeray, Stoker, among many others, but he also encourages us to question the rivalry between journalism and literature, which remains as pressing for us today as it was in the1930s." -Peter D. McDonald, St Hugh's College, Oxford


"[A] strong book." --Victorian Studies


"Well-researched and suggestive...Rubery's work will be an important reference point for our continuing attempts to understand the distinctiveness and the internal dynamics of modern print culture. " --RaVoN: Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net


About the Author


Matthew Rubery is Lecturer in Victorian Literature at the University of Leeds. He has held fellowships at the University of Pennsylvania Humanities Forum and Oregon State University Humanities Center since receiving his PhD from Harvard University, where he was awarded the Howard Mumford Jones Prize. He is the recipient of a number of professional awards including the Joseph Conrad Society's Juliet McLauchlan Essay Prize. His work on nineteenth-century print culture has appeared in English Literary History, Nineteenth-Century Literature, the Henry James Review, English Language Notes, and the Journal of Victorian Culture. He has also contributed to the Cambridge Companion to Victorian Culture and Dictionary of Nineteenth-Century Journalism.

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