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The Most Disreputable Trade

Publishing the Classics of English Poetry 1765-1810

Thomas F Bonnell author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:17th Apr '08

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Most Disreputable Trade cover

A publishing phenomenon began in Glasgow in 1765. Uniform pocket editions of the English Poets printed by Robert and Andrew Foulis formed the first link in a chain of literary products that has grown ever since, as we see from series like Penguin Classics and Oxford World Classics. Bonnell explores the origins of this phenomenon, analysing more than a dozen multi-volume poetry collections that sprang from the British press over the next half century. Why such collections flourished so quickly, who published them, what forms they assumed, how they were marketed and advertised, how they initiated their readers into the rites of mass-market consumerism, and what role they played in the construction of a national literature are all questions central to the study. The collections played out against an epic battle over copyright law, and involved fierce contention for market share in the 'classics' among rival publishers. It brought despair to the most powerful of London printers, William Strahan, who prophesied that competition of this nature would ruin bookselling, turning it into 'the most pitiful, beggarly, precarious, unprofitable, and disreputable Trade in Britain'. Samuel Johnson's Lives of the Poets were part of such a collection, dubbed 'Johnson's Poets'. The third edition of this collection, published in 1810, brought the national project to its high water mark: it contained 129 poets, plus extensive translations from the Greek and Roman classics. By this point, all the features that characterize modern series of vernacular classics had been established, and never since has such an ambitious expression of the poetic canon been repeated, as Bonnell shows by peering forward into the nineteenth century and beyond. Based on work with archival materials, newspapers, handbills, prospectuses, and above all the books themselves, Bonnell's findings shed light on all aspects of the book trade. Valuable bibliographical data is presented regarding every collection, forming an indispensable resource for future work on the history of the English poetry canon.

There is much more in Bonnell's engaging and entertaining study to interest students of eighteenth-century poetry, publishing history, and the commercialisation of literature. The Most Disreputable Trade is humanist bibliography at its best: throughly researched clearly presented, and a pleasure to read. * F.P. Lock, The Review of English Studies *
engaging and entertaining...The Most Disreputable Trade is humanist bibliography at its best: thoroughly researched, clearly presented, and a pleasure to read. * F.P.Lock, Review of English Studies *
[a] compelling account of eighteenth- and ealry nineteenth-century British popular literature * James Raven, Times Literary Supplement *
Has all the hallmarks of a book backed up by decades of thorough and rigorous study. * Eighteenth-Century Life *

ISBN: 9780199532209

Dimensions: 242mm x 163mm x 24mm

Weight: 847g

402 pages