Nineteenth-century editors frequently discussed their work in public forums (including their own periodicals) and in private correspondence. These sources provide insight into how editors imagined their work and their professional roles. For many nineteenth-century editors, one of the most important (and underappreciated) elements of their work was building expansive social networks that promoted productive relationships between writers, readers, and other editors. After establishing the function of the nineteenth-century editor in Chapter I, I proceed in the remaining chapters to examine how specific Southern editors attempted to gain access to a national audience by cultivating relationships with their Northern counterparts. Chapter II us...
When the call for gender diversity in the Shakespearean editorial field first gained strength in the...
Scholarly editions became entrenched as published texts during the eighteenth century. This disserta...
This book combines and expands on three articles previously published independently in journals of t...
Nineteenth-century editors frequently discussed their work in public forums (including their own per...
To more fully understand nineteenth-century literary production, literary scholars must consider per...
This project explores nineteenth-century Southern women writers’ discussions of self-regulation in t...
This essay calls for the concerted study of editorship as a distinct mode of cultural expression. Gi...
This dissertation explores the ways in which authors, editors, and readers negotiated conflicting de...
This thesis examines three pairs of author-editor relationships, whose authors published one of thei...
(From the Introduction) The discovery and study of a journal of considerable age is not unique. Jour...
My dissertation examines popular authorship in the antebellum United States. Following the print exp...
text"Spirited Media" analyzes distributed structures of authorship in the reform literature of the n...
In discussing the state of Web-based resources in my field, nineteenth-century American literature, ...
Patricia Okker’s study of serialized novels published in nineteenth-century American magazines is el...
Looking backward, I am amazed at how my dissertation is the culmination of serendipitous events. Per...
When the call for gender diversity in the Shakespearean editorial field first gained strength in the...
Scholarly editions became entrenched as published texts during the eighteenth century. This disserta...
This book combines and expands on three articles previously published independently in journals of t...
Nineteenth-century editors frequently discussed their work in public forums (including their own per...
To more fully understand nineteenth-century literary production, literary scholars must consider per...
This project explores nineteenth-century Southern women writers’ discussions of self-regulation in t...
This essay calls for the concerted study of editorship as a distinct mode of cultural expression. Gi...
This dissertation explores the ways in which authors, editors, and readers negotiated conflicting de...
This thesis examines three pairs of author-editor relationships, whose authors published one of thei...
(From the Introduction) The discovery and study of a journal of considerable age is not unique. Jour...
My dissertation examines popular authorship in the antebellum United States. Following the print exp...
text"Spirited Media" analyzes distributed structures of authorship in the reform literature of the n...
In discussing the state of Web-based resources in my field, nineteenth-century American literature, ...
Patricia Okker’s study of serialized novels published in nineteenth-century American magazines is el...
Looking backward, I am amazed at how my dissertation is the culmination of serendipitous events. Per...
When the call for gender diversity in the Shakespearean editorial field first gained strength in the...
Scholarly editions became entrenched as published texts during the eighteenth century. This disserta...
This book combines and expands on three articles previously published independently in journals of t...