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The Novelty of Newspapers

Victorian Fiction After the Invention of the News

Matthew Rubery author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:6th Aug '09

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The Novelty of Newspapers cover

The Novelty of Newspapers explains why the Victorian novel is best understood alongside the simultaneous development of the news as a commercial commodity read by up to a million readers per day. This study focuses on five of the most important of these narrative conventions-the shipping intelligence, personal advertisement, leading article, interview, and foreign correspondence-in order to show how concretely journalism influenced the novel at this time. Drawing on examples of periodicals from the period, Matthew Rubery reveals how the commercial press arising in nineteenth-century Britain profoundly influenced Mary Braddon, Charlotte Brontë, Wilkie Collins, Charles Dickens, Joseph Conrad, Henry James, Anthony Trollope, and many other novelists who all used narrative conventions derived from the press in their fiction.

This study succeeds in documenting historically the narratological proximity and the inter-media competition of journalism and the novel in the early and mid- Victorian period. * Julian Murphet, Review of English Studies *

  • Winner of Winner of the ESSE Book Award for Junior Scholars 2010.

ISBN: 9780195369267

Dimensions: 155mm x 236mm x 18mm

Weight: 496g

248 pages