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Dynamics of the Pictured Page: Representing Nation "Illustrated London News"
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Dynamics of the Pictured Page: Representing Nation "Illustrated London News"
Current price: $140.00
Barnes and Noble
Dynamics of the Pictured Page: Representing Nation "Illustrated London News"
Current price: $140.00
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Size: Hardcover
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Originally published in 1998,
Dynamics of the Pictured Page
provides a critical study of the world's first regularly illustrated newspaper, the
Illustrated London News,
founded by Herbert Ingram in 1842. Focusing on the first decade of this enormously influential weekly, this book situates the
ILN
within the publishing history of periodicals, arguing not only for a better understanding of those new modes of production engendered by an illustrated newspaper, but also for the need to theorize the relations between engraved images and printed text that constituted the
, which advertised itself as an unprecedented 'marriage' between art and literature.
Through a series of interpretive interventions that focus on categories that would have had especially powerful reverberations for Victorian readers (for example, the home, the railway, the public funeral, and serialized literature), this book traces the newspaper's complex strategies of appeal to a middle-class English readership.
This book will appeal to students of nineteenth-century literature and history (especially those with an interest in publishing history and the history of the press), as well as to Victorian studies scholars.
Dynamics of the Pictured Page
provides a critical study of the world's first regularly illustrated newspaper, the
Illustrated London News,
founded by Herbert Ingram in 1842. Focusing on the first decade of this enormously influential weekly, this book situates the
ILN
within the publishing history of periodicals, arguing not only for a better understanding of those new modes of production engendered by an illustrated newspaper, but also for the need to theorize the relations between engraved images and printed text that constituted the
, which advertised itself as an unprecedented 'marriage' between art and literature.
Through a series of interpretive interventions that focus on categories that would have had especially powerful reverberations for Victorian readers (for example, the home, the railway, the public funeral, and serialized literature), this book traces the newspaper's complex strategies of appeal to a middle-class English readership.
This book will appeal to students of nineteenth-century literature and history (especially those with an interest in publishing history and the history of the press), as well as to Victorian studies scholars.