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The Appearance Of Print In Eighteenthcentury Fiction Christopher Flint

  • SKU: BELL-2511620
The Appearance Of Print In Eighteenthcentury Fiction Christopher Flint
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The Appearance Of Print In Eighteenthcentury Fiction Christopher Flint instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cambridge University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.33 MB
Pages: 295
Author: Christopher Flint
ISBN: 9781107008397, 1107008395
Language: English
Year: 2011

Product desciption

The Appearance Of Print In Eighteenthcentury Fiction Christopher Flint by Christopher Flint 9781107008397, 1107008395 instant download after payment.

Eighteenth-century fiction holds an unusual place in the history of modern print culture. The novel gained prominence largely because of advances in publishing, but, as a popular genre, it also helped shape those very developments. Authors in the period manipulated the appearance of the page and print technology more deliberately than has been supposed, prompting new forms of reception among readers. Christopher Flint's book explores works by both obscure 'scribblers' and canonical figures, such as Swift, Haywood, Defoe, Richardson, Sterne and Austen, that interrogated the complex interactions between the book's material aspects and its producers and consumers. Flint links historical shifts in how authors addressed their profession to how books were manufactured and how readers consumed texts. He argues that writers exploited typographic media to augment other crucial developments in prose fiction, from formal realism and free indirect discourse to accounts of how 'the novel' defined itself as a genre.

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