|
Oxford Reader's Companion to Trollope (Oxford Readers)
by R. C. Terry
See all pages
with references to "Fortnightly Review".
Excerpt - on Page 4: "
... return to authorship one day. JS agnosticism, atheism. For a devout believer like Trollope, these were alien concepts. When the Fortnightly Review was founded (1865), he wanted to exclude from the pages of this expressly liberal periodical any material that called into ... "
|
|
The Persistence of Victorian Liberalism: The Politics of Social Reform in Britain, 1870-1900 (Contributions to the Study of World History)
by Robert F. Haggard
See all pages
with references to "Fortnightly Review".
Excerpt - on Page 20: "
... 1894); Frederick Greenwood, "Britain Fin de Siecle," Contemporary Review (August 1890); and Charles Roberts, "The Physical Condition of the Masses," Fortnightly Review (October 1887). ... "
Key Phrases:
New York, Contemporary Review, National Review, Fortnightly Review, Westminster Review, Reprint Edition, East End, Outcast London, London County Council, Salvation Army, Joseph Chamberlain, Charles Booth
(see more)
|
|
Grant Allen: Literature And Cultural Politics At The Fin De Siecle
by William Greenslade
See all pages
with references to "Fortnightly Review".
Excerpt - on Page 12: "
... In this respect he was an editor's dream, particularly for those of radical instincts like Frank Harris of the Fortnightly Review, W.T. Stead of the Pall Mall Gazette, or E.T. Cook of the Westminster Gazette. ... "
Key Phrases:
Grant Allen, Cornhill Magazine, Pall Mall Gazette, The British Barbarians, Westminster Gazette, Fortnightly Review, selective gaze, new hedonism, courtship conventions, romantic closure, illustrated magazine, romance plot
(see more)
|
|
Literature in the Marketplace: Nineteenth-Century British Publishing and Reading Practices (Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture)
by John O. Jordan
See all pages
with references to "Fortnightly Review".
Excerpt - on Page 10: "
... two of them in the guise of (unpaid) reviews of other books. The Fortnightly Review commissioned and paid for signed articles; the four that Pater contributed to it were more discreet and conventional analyses of ... "
Key Phrases:
New York, Charles Dickens, Pickwick Papers, George Eliot, William Wordsworth, Fortnightly Review, intransigent details, copyright pieces, serial fiction, serial text, one essayist, male pseudonym
(see more)
|
|
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||