This essay calls for the concerted study of editorship as a distinct mode of cultural expression. Given that the collaborative craft of editors is often invisible, the study of editorship requires attending to the practices, habits, and techniques of editing as themselves historically contingent and significant objects of inquiry. This essay analyzes a cross-section of editorial practices in 1862 when a controversy during the Civil War over slavery and emancipation entangled editors from Horace Greeley and Frederick Douglass to their less-conspicuous peers at L’Union (a bilingual, Black Creole weekly in New Orleans). These examples reveal the practical language of editorship expressed through serial formats. By reading editing on its own te...
When the call for gender diversity in the Shakespearean editorial field first gained strength in the...
My title is somewhat facetious, but not completely. There has been a profound shift in the direction...
This article examines the first newspaper operated, published, and distributed by free blacks in the...
This dissertation advances a new theory of the editor. Editors are pervasively influential for shapi...
To more fully understand nineteenth-century literary production, literary scholars must consider per...
Nineteenth-century editors frequently discussed their work in public forums (including their own per...
Nineteenth-century editors frequently discussed their work in public forums (including their own per...
The American historical editing profession has a rich and varied history of publishing projects rang...
Black people’s contributions to print ventures have been constant and manifold across the Atlantic w...
This article stems from my recent work on Race and Children’s Literature of the Gilded Age (RCLGA),1...
Frederick Douglass through the Eyes of His Contemporaries With Douglass in His Own Time, editor and ...
Editing is usually perceived in the pejorative within in the literature of composition studies gener...
The nature of the editor\u27s task frequently forces her to acquire greater knowledge of book produc...
When John Scott and William Christie, representatives of the London Magazine and Blackwood’s Edinbur...
Scholars correctly appreciate Frederick Douglass’s novella The Heroic Slave (1853) as an important e...
When the call for gender diversity in the Shakespearean editorial field first gained strength in the...
My title is somewhat facetious, but not completely. There has been a profound shift in the direction...
This article examines the first newspaper operated, published, and distributed by free blacks in the...
This dissertation advances a new theory of the editor. Editors are pervasively influential for shapi...
To more fully understand nineteenth-century literary production, literary scholars must consider per...
Nineteenth-century editors frequently discussed their work in public forums (including their own per...
Nineteenth-century editors frequently discussed their work in public forums (including their own per...
The American historical editing profession has a rich and varied history of publishing projects rang...
Black people’s contributions to print ventures have been constant and manifold across the Atlantic w...
This article stems from my recent work on Race and Children’s Literature of the Gilded Age (RCLGA),1...
Frederick Douglass through the Eyes of His Contemporaries With Douglass in His Own Time, editor and ...
Editing is usually perceived in the pejorative within in the literature of composition studies gener...
The nature of the editor\u27s task frequently forces her to acquire greater knowledge of book produc...
When John Scott and William Christie, representatives of the London Magazine and Blackwood’s Edinbur...
Scholars correctly appreciate Frederick Douglass’s novella The Heroic Slave (1853) as an important e...
When the call for gender diversity in the Shakespearean editorial field first gained strength in the...
My title is somewhat facetious, but not completely. There has been a profound shift in the direction...
This article examines the first newspaper operated, published, and distributed by free blacks in the...