Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2002This dissertation examines eighteenth-century English essay periodicals in the context of Jurgen Habermas' influential work, The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere. It has become generally accepted that journals like the Tatler and the Spectator were vital to the construction of the bourgeois public sphere; I investigate these journals' formal nature in order to understand why they, rather than another genre, played this constitutive role. Emphasizing the public sphere's textual and conceptual nature, I argue that essay periodicals themselves distinguish between the non-existent idealized public sphere and its very real ideological power, a power literally represented on the pages o...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020This dissertation examines the genre of the author-pub...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 65-67.Introduction -- Chapter One. Ladies, libraries and lite...
This dissertation explores the ways in which authors, editors, and readers negotiated conflicting de...
This thesis is about the influence of the periodical essay on the novel – and vice versa – in the ea...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2012This dissertation argues that the elements of informal...
ROMANTIC PERIODICALS AND THE INVENTION OF THE LIVING AUTHOR Christine Marie Woody Michael Gamer This...
The periodical essay is the sole British literary genre to have emerged and declined within the chro...
textIn this dissertation, I examine antagonistic relationships between women writers in the first ha...
This dissertation argues that as a commercial print culture developed in America between 1720 and 18...
This dissertation seeks to establish a working canon of British and American women essayists from th...
After the Licensing Act was allowed to expire in 1695, the publishing industry first in London and t...
This dissertation is about the Victorian debate over anonymous periodical publication and the litera...
Prose Declaimers argues that major romantic essayists repurposed classical rhetoric in their experim...
This dissertation explores amatory fiction as a genre significant to English literary history. I gro...
This dissertation examines representations of authorship and subjecthood in the Romantic period as p...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020This dissertation examines the genre of the author-pub...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 65-67.Introduction -- Chapter One. Ladies, libraries and lite...
This dissertation explores the ways in which authors, editors, and readers negotiated conflicting de...
This thesis is about the influence of the periodical essay on the novel – and vice versa – in the ea...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2012This dissertation argues that the elements of informal...
ROMANTIC PERIODICALS AND THE INVENTION OF THE LIVING AUTHOR Christine Marie Woody Michael Gamer This...
The periodical essay is the sole British literary genre to have emerged and declined within the chro...
textIn this dissertation, I examine antagonistic relationships between women writers in the first ha...
This dissertation argues that as a commercial print culture developed in America between 1720 and 18...
This dissertation seeks to establish a working canon of British and American women essayists from th...
After the Licensing Act was allowed to expire in 1695, the publishing industry first in London and t...
This dissertation is about the Victorian debate over anonymous periodical publication and the litera...
Prose Declaimers argues that major romantic essayists repurposed classical rhetoric in their experim...
This dissertation explores amatory fiction as a genre significant to English literary history. I gro...
This dissertation examines representations of authorship and subjecthood in the Romantic period as p...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020This dissertation examines the genre of the author-pub...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 65-67.Introduction -- Chapter One. Ladies, libraries and lite...
This dissertation explores the ways in which authors, editors, and readers negotiated conflicting de...