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Writing Authorship And Photography In British Literary Culture 18801920 Capturing The Image Emily Ennis

  • SKU: BELL-50228810
Writing Authorship And Photography In British Literary Culture 18801920 Capturing The Image Emily Ennis
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Writing Authorship And Photography In British Literary Culture 18801920 Capturing The Image Emily Ennis instant download after payment.

Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
File Extension: PDF
File size: 27.64 MB
Author: Emily Ennis
ISBN: 9781350196186, 9781350196216, 1350196185, 1350196215
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Writing Authorship And Photography In British Literary Culture 18801920 Capturing The Image Emily Ennis by Emily Ennis 9781350196186, 9781350196216, 1350196185, 1350196215 instant download after payment.

At the turn of the 20th century, printing and photographic technologies evolved rapidly, leading to the birth of mass media and the rise of the amateur photographer. Demonstrating how this development happened symbiotically with great changes in the shape of British literature, Writing, Authorship and Photography in British Literary Culture, 1880-1920 explores this co-evolution, showing that as both writing and photography became tools of mass dissemination, literary writers were forced to re-evaluate their professional and personal identities.
Focusing on four key authors—Thomas Hardy, Bram Stoker, Joseph Conrad and Virginia Woolf—each of which had their own private and professional connections to photographs, this book offers valuable historical contexts for contemporary cultural developments and anxieties. At first establishing the authors’ response to developing technologies through their non-fiction, personal correspondences and working drafts, Ennis moves on to examine how their perceptions of photography extend into their major works of fiction: A Laodicean, Dracula, The Secret Agent, The Inheritors and The Voyage Out.
Reflecting on the first ‘graphic revolution’ in a world where text and image are now reproduced digitally and circulated en masse and online, Ennis redirects our attention to when image and text appeared alongside each other for the first time and the crises this sparked for authors: how they would respond to increasingly photographic depictions of everyday life, and in turn, how their writing adapted to a distinctly visual mass media.

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