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Aus unseren Neuerwerbungen – Anglistik 2019.9

Buchcover

The Cam­bridge his­to­ry of the book in Britain 7: The twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry and beyond
The Cam­bridge His­to­ry of the Book in Britain is an author­i­ta­tive series which sur­veys the his­to­ry of pub­lish­ing, book­selling, author­ship and read­ing in Britain. This sev­enth and final vol­ume sur­veys the twen­ti­eth and twen­ty-first cen­turies from a range of per­spec­tives in order to cre­ate a com­pre­hen­sive guide, from grow­ing pro­fes­sion­al­i­sa­tion at the begin­ning of the twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry, to the impact of dig­i­tal tech­nolo­gies at the end. Its mul­ti-authored focus on the mate­r­i­al book and its man­u­fac­ture broad­ens to a study of the book’s author­ship and read­er­ship, and its pro­duc­tion and dis­sem­i­na­tion via pub­lish­ing and book­selling. It exam­ines in detail key mar­ket sec­tors over the course of the peri­od, and con­cludes with a series of essays con­cen­trat­ing on aspects of book his­to­ry: the book in wartime; class, democ­ra­cy and val­ue; books and oth­er media; intel­lec­tu­al prop­er­ty and copy­right; and impe­ri­al­ism and post-impe­ri­al­ism.
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Buchcover

The com­fort of strangers: social life and lit­er­ary form
In most accounts, lit­er­a­ture of the nine­teenth cen­tu­ry com­pul­sive­ly tells the sto­ry of the indi­vid­ual and inte­ri­or­i­ty. But amidst the new­ly dense social land­scapes of moder­ni­ty, with Lon­don as the first city of one mil­lion inhab­i­tants, this lit­er­a­ture also sought to rep­re­sent those unknown and unmet: strangers. Focus­ing on the ways that both Vic­to­ri­an lit­er­a­ture and mod­ern social thought respond­ed to an emer­gent „soci­ety of strangers,“ The Com­fort of Strangers argues for a new rela­tion between lit­er­ary form and the social­ly dense envi­ron­ments of moder­ni­ty, insist­ing upon strangers in these works not as alien­at­ing, fear­some oth­ers, but a rel­a­tive­ly banal yet trans­for­ma­tive fact of every­day life, the dark mat­ter of the nine­teenth-cen­tu­ry social uni­verse.
Tak­ing up „the lit­er­a­ture of social den­si­ty,“ Gage McWee­ny engages with a range of gener­i­cal­ly diverse works from the age of Vic­to­ri­an sym­pa­thy to illu­mi­nate sur­pris­ing invest­ments in ephemer­al rela­tions, anonymi­ty, and social dis­tance. Life amidst strangers on urban streets and mar­kets pro­duced new social expe­ri­ences, both allur­ing and fear­some, and McWee­ny shows how real­ist lit­er­ary form is remade by the rela­tion­al pos­si­bil­i­ties offered by the imper­son­al inti­ma­cy of life among those unknown and the pow­er of weak social ties. Read­ing works by Charles Dick­ens, Matthew Arnold, George Eliot, Oscar Wilde, and Hen­ry James, he dis­cov­ers a species of Vic­to­ri­an social­i­ty not imag­ined under J.S. Mill’s descrip­tion in On Lib­er­ty of soci­ety as a crowd imping­ing upon the indi­vid­ual. Instead, McWee­ny mines nine­teenth-cen­tu­ry literature’s soci­o­log­i­cal imag­i­na­tion to reveal a set of works divert­ed by and into inten­si­ties locat­ed in strangers and the mod­ern forms of social­i­ty they emblema­tize.
Treat­ing seri­ous­ly the pref­er­ence for the many over the few, the imper­son­al inti­ma­cy of strangers over those who are friends and acquain­tances, The Com­fort of Strangers shows how lit­er­a­ture and soci­ol­o­gy togeth­er pro­duced mod­ern under­stand­ings of the social, open­ing up canon­i­cal works of the nine­teenth cen­tu­ry to a host of strange, new mean­ings.
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