Among the quarterlies which marked the Romantic Age and the Victorian Age, The Westminster Review (1824-1900) stands out as the organ of radical opinions, committed to the diffusion of culture to all classes. Founded by Jeremy Bentham, it was meant to contribute to the transmission of culture among the middle class, including the lower middle-class. From 1836 until 1840, under the influence of the younger generation of Philosophic Radicals, with John Stuart Mill at their head, its literary influence rose sharply and with the merger of the London Review with the Westminster Review, a new period of its history began. Although the decade of the 1840s witnessed a concentration of the topics discussed on political and social questions rather tha...
An original study of the role of the Chartist press in the campaign for democracy in Victorian Brita...
There is a pattern in nineteenth-century Britain that only exists within novels written by women. T...
Fed up with the commercial and moral restrictions of the mainstream press, the diverse avant-garde g...
Among the quarterlies which marked the Romantic Age and the Victorian Age, The Westminster Review (1...
Rise of the Great Political Reviews in England. The opening of the nineteenth century marked a new e...
The aim of this study has been to assess the role and status of works of literature for a periodical...
This copy is bookmarked for access to Review of 'Men and Things in 1823'", "Periodical Literature", ...
Long considered the literary representatives of the public sphere, British periodicals underwent sig...
The period of British history that literary scholars have long associated with the second generatio...
The journey toward equal citizenship for women in England during the nineteenth century was a comple...
peer reviewedThis volume explores the literary, cultural, social and political climate in Britain du...
Reprinted from the Edinburgh and Quarterly reviews, the Nineteenth century and after, and the Specta...
In this article, I consider the birth of the first illustrated magazine in the context of editorial ...
Using primary sources in Russian and British historiography, the author analyzes the evolution of pu...
The Victorian period is often regarded as a high point in literary history, generating a wealth of m...
An original study of the role of the Chartist press in the campaign for democracy in Victorian Brita...
There is a pattern in nineteenth-century Britain that only exists within novels written by women. T...
Fed up with the commercial and moral restrictions of the mainstream press, the diverse avant-garde g...
Among the quarterlies which marked the Romantic Age and the Victorian Age, The Westminster Review (1...
Rise of the Great Political Reviews in England. The opening of the nineteenth century marked a new e...
The aim of this study has been to assess the role and status of works of literature for a periodical...
This copy is bookmarked for access to Review of 'Men and Things in 1823'", "Periodical Literature", ...
Long considered the literary representatives of the public sphere, British periodicals underwent sig...
The period of British history that literary scholars have long associated with the second generatio...
The journey toward equal citizenship for women in England during the nineteenth century was a comple...
peer reviewedThis volume explores the literary, cultural, social and political climate in Britain du...
Reprinted from the Edinburgh and Quarterly reviews, the Nineteenth century and after, and the Specta...
In this article, I consider the birth of the first illustrated magazine in the context of editorial ...
Using primary sources in Russian and British historiography, the author analyzes the evolution of pu...
The Victorian period is often regarded as a high point in literary history, generating a wealth of m...
An original study of the role of the Chartist press in the campaign for democracy in Victorian Brita...
There is a pattern in nineteenth-century Britain that only exists within novels written by women. T...
Fed up with the commercial and moral restrictions of the mainstream press, the diverse avant-garde g...