This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic periodical and the Minerva Press through the lens of the hugely popular Lady’s Magazine; or, Entertaining Companion for the Fair Sex (1700–1832). Close attention to the points of contact outlined in this essay is multiply illuminating, I argue, not least because it forces us to challenge enduring but misleading associations about popular literary forms, professional authorship and women’s writing in the Romantic era. The Lady’s Magazine and the Minerva Press presented aspiring authors with competing, but complementary, mass-media outlets that were eagerly exploited by hundreds of Romantic-era writers, many of whom published energetically with...
This article examines the popular and non-canonical Victorian novelist Ouida (Maria Louise de la Ram...
During the Romantic period, it became possible to transform authorship into celebrity through a proc...
The eighteenth century witnessed the rapid expansion of social, political, religious and literary ne...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
This essay examines the false and dubious attributions of select Minerva novels to both Ann Radcliff...
As the most infamous novel publisher of the Romantic period, William Lane’s Minerva Press garnered s...
This collection of nine essays exemplifies how crucial collaboration is and will be for continued un...
ROMANTIC PERIODICALS AND THE INVENTION OF THE LIVING AUTHOR Christine Marie Woody Michael Gamer This...
In the wake of a personal scandal that Horace Walpole dubbed 'The Gunninghiad', Susannah Gunning ret...
Through the exploration of a selection of Minerva titles from across the period of the Press’s domin...
Jane Austen’s famous reference to Ann Radcliffe and 'all her imitators' in Northanger Abbey can be u...
'Mrs. Meeke' was the most prolific novelist of the Romantic period, publishing twenty-four novels an...
In Reading, Writing, and Romanticism: The Anxiety of Reception (2000), Lucy Newlyn posits that ‘Roma...
This article examines the publication history of a popular group of loosely related, variously autho...
This article examines the popular and non-canonical Victorian novelist Ouida (Maria Louise de la Ram...
During the Romantic period, it became possible to transform authorship into celebrity through a proc...
The eighteenth century witnessed the rapid expansion of social, political, religious and literary ne...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
This essay examines the rich and hitherto unexplored rivalries and connections between the Romantic ...
This essay examines the false and dubious attributions of select Minerva novels to both Ann Radcliff...
As the most infamous novel publisher of the Romantic period, William Lane’s Minerva Press garnered s...
This collection of nine essays exemplifies how crucial collaboration is and will be for continued un...
ROMANTIC PERIODICALS AND THE INVENTION OF THE LIVING AUTHOR Christine Marie Woody Michael Gamer This...
In the wake of a personal scandal that Horace Walpole dubbed 'The Gunninghiad', Susannah Gunning ret...
Through the exploration of a selection of Minerva titles from across the period of the Press’s domin...
Jane Austen’s famous reference to Ann Radcliffe and 'all her imitators' in Northanger Abbey can be u...
'Mrs. Meeke' was the most prolific novelist of the Romantic period, publishing twenty-four novels an...
In Reading, Writing, and Romanticism: The Anxiety of Reception (2000), Lucy Newlyn posits that ‘Roma...
This article examines the publication history of a popular group of loosely related, variously autho...
This article examines the popular and non-canonical Victorian novelist Ouida (Maria Louise de la Ram...
During the Romantic period, it became possible to transform authorship into celebrity through a proc...
The eighteenth century witnessed the rapid expansion of social, political, religious and literary ne...