International audienceA satirical weekly paper called the Grub-Street Journal ( GSJ 1730–1737) offered an innovative approach to managing the flow of unverified and contradictory reports that accompanied the growth of newspapers in eighteenth-century London. Using the fictional persona of ‘Quidnunc’ (a contemporary term for news addicts), the editor Richard Russel compiled accounts of the same event from several newspapers and juxtaposed them on the page, thereby revealing their similarities and differences. Russel’s manual version of news ‘aggregation’ exposed errors and contradictions, but it also provided readers with details that would have otherwise required consulting several sources. Meanwhile, Quidnunc interjected ironic remarks, po...
Between the 1780s and the 1830s increasing amounts of agency were assigned to - and claimed by - the...
60 pages. A thesis presented to the Department of Journalism and the Clark Honors College of the Uni...
The success of William Thackeray’s shilling monthly periodical, The Cornhill Magazine, which first a...
International audienceA satirical weekly paper called the Grub-Street Journal ( GSJ 1730–1737) offer...
This article examines for the first time the accounts for the newspaper the London Gazette from May ...
The years 1830-36 were decisive ones for the development of English graphic satire. They witnessed t...
Libel and Lampoon shows how English satire and the law mutually shaped each other during the long ei...
Press historians argue that the press boom of 1695 transformed the way in which English men and wome...
This thesis is a study of the interaction of print culture and the practice of politics in Britain d...
© Cambridge University Press 2004. Published version reproduced with the permission of the publisher...
Long considered the literary representatives of the public sphere, British periodicals underwent sig...
This paper examines the dynamics of the visual representations in a range of British nineteenth cen...
From the moment of its first publication in March 1836, Charles Dickens’s first serial novel The Pos...
Gary Dyer breaks new ground by surveying and interpreting hundreds of satirical poems and prose narr...
<p>On 18 September 1809, Covent Garden Theatre reopened, lavishly decorated after the devastating fi...
Between the 1780s and the 1830s increasing amounts of agency were assigned to - and claimed by - the...
60 pages. A thesis presented to the Department of Journalism and the Clark Honors College of the Uni...
The success of William Thackeray’s shilling monthly periodical, The Cornhill Magazine, which first a...
International audienceA satirical weekly paper called the Grub-Street Journal ( GSJ 1730–1737) offer...
This article examines for the first time the accounts for the newspaper the London Gazette from May ...
The years 1830-36 were decisive ones for the development of English graphic satire. They witnessed t...
Libel and Lampoon shows how English satire and the law mutually shaped each other during the long ei...
Press historians argue that the press boom of 1695 transformed the way in which English men and wome...
This thesis is a study of the interaction of print culture and the practice of politics in Britain d...
© Cambridge University Press 2004. Published version reproduced with the permission of the publisher...
Long considered the literary representatives of the public sphere, British periodicals underwent sig...
This paper examines the dynamics of the visual representations in a range of British nineteenth cen...
From the moment of its first publication in March 1836, Charles Dickens’s first serial novel The Pos...
Gary Dyer breaks new ground by surveying and interpreting hundreds of satirical poems and prose narr...
<p>On 18 September 1809, Covent Garden Theatre reopened, lavishly decorated after the devastating fi...
Between the 1780s and the 1830s increasing amounts of agency were assigned to - and claimed by - the...
60 pages. A thesis presented to the Department of Journalism and the Clark Honors College of the Uni...
The success of William Thackeray’s shilling monthly periodical, The Cornhill Magazine, which first a...