Subjugated Knowledges: Journalism, Gender, and Literature in the 19th Century

Subjugated Knowledges: Journalism, Gender, and Literature in the 19th Century

by Laurel Brake (Editor), Laurel Brake (Editor)

Synopsis

This book examines the connection between print and culture in the nineteenth century, identifying a neglected and important body of Victorian criticism. Subjugated Knowledges explores the relations of certain forms of nineteenth-century printed texts to their modes of production and to each other, in their own time period and in ours. Brake claims that there is a high degree of interdependence among literature, history, and journalism. She investigates the ways in which space is designated male or female as well as the way authorship is constructed in various forms of biography, including in such diverse forms as obituaries and dictionaries. The book moves from a general mapping of the relations between literature and journalism and their respective formations to studies of individual textssuch as Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Woman's World, and the Dictionary of National Biography and of relations between (the construction of) authorship and publishing history. The volume is comprised of three sections: Literature and Journalism, Gendered Space, and Biography and Authorship. The first section contains chapters on such diverse issues as the professionalization of critics, cultural formation of journals, new journalism, press censorship, and decadence. The second section discusses women's magazines of the 1880s and 90s, while the third examines debates in the press about biography.

$111.41

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Publisher: New York University Press
Published: 01 Jan 1994

ISBN 10: 0814712185
ISBN 13: 9780814712184

Media Reviews

This book is helpful because in order to craft a final resolution to the conflict, one must understand what events transpired in the first place. De Waal's book significantly contributes to this purpose and establishes itself as one of the standard works for understanding this conflict. - Parameters ,


Brilliant. - Time ,


Never have all the twists and turns, sad carnage, and bullheadedness on all sides been better described-or, indeed, better explained . . . Offers a deeper and more compelling account of the conflict than anyone before. - Foreign Affairs ,


Admirable, rigorous. De Waal [is] a wise and patient reporter. - The New York Review of Books ,


This book is a major milestone in the Western scholarship on Karabakh. - Armenian Freedom Network ,

Author Bio
Laurel Brakeis Lecturer in Literature, Birbeck College, University of London. She is the editor of The Year's Work in English Studies.