Scholars have repeatedly commented on the marked anti-business bias, the denigration of business and trade, that is an integral part of the critique of capitalism articulated in canonical Victorian novels. Did the same animosity permeate discussions of business in the periodical press? How was the businessman described and evaluated in the pages of Victorian periodicals? My investigation is an experiment in distant or vertical reading: using as database the ProQuest digital archive of British periodicals, I analyze the occurrences of three text segments (\u201cman of business\u201d, \u201cbusiness habits\u201d and \u201cbusiness life\u201d) looking for repeated associations of words and recurrent phraseology. The final section discusses a...
As the most infamous novel publisher of the Romantic period, William Lane’s Minerva Press garnered s...
The success of William Thackeray’s shilling monthly periodical, The Cornhill Magazine, which first a...
The descriptor “hack,” as in hack writer, was slang for a prostitute before becoming common shorthan...
Scholars have repeatedly commented on the marked anti-business bias, the denigration of business and...
This dissertation is about the Victorian debate over anonymous periodical publication and the litera...
Many commentators believe that the business press “missed” the story of the twenty-first century—the...
Long considered the literary representatives of the public sphere, British periodicals underwent sig...
This article adds to critics' growing interest in Romantic periodicals by focusing on weekly periodi...
Victorian Literary Businesses is a comprehensive exploration of how business practices formed in the...
This article asks what an analysis of nineteenth century English newspapers can tell us about the de...
Every nation has its master theme, Bronson Howard observed around 1886. In France, this perennial to...
Historians frequently make statements which, superficially or fundamentally, seem to be gross genera...
This book provides a study of magazine publishing in Britain from the perspective of the entrepreneu...
In the nineteenth-century book trade in the UK, the proliferation of the book as a cheap read...
Recent work by economic historians illustrates that up to thirty percent of Victorian businesses wer...
As the most infamous novel publisher of the Romantic period, William Lane’s Minerva Press garnered s...
The success of William Thackeray’s shilling monthly periodical, The Cornhill Magazine, which first a...
The descriptor “hack,” as in hack writer, was slang for a prostitute before becoming common shorthan...
Scholars have repeatedly commented on the marked anti-business bias, the denigration of business and...
This dissertation is about the Victorian debate over anonymous periodical publication and the litera...
Many commentators believe that the business press “missed” the story of the twenty-first century—the...
Long considered the literary representatives of the public sphere, British periodicals underwent sig...
This article adds to critics' growing interest in Romantic periodicals by focusing on weekly periodi...
Victorian Literary Businesses is a comprehensive exploration of how business practices formed in the...
This article asks what an analysis of nineteenth century English newspapers can tell us about the de...
Every nation has its master theme, Bronson Howard observed around 1886. In France, this perennial to...
Historians frequently make statements which, superficially or fundamentally, seem to be gross genera...
This book provides a study of magazine publishing in Britain from the perspective of the entrepreneu...
In the nineteenth-century book trade in the UK, the proliferation of the book as a cheap read...
Recent work by economic historians illustrates that up to thirty percent of Victorian businesses wer...
As the most infamous novel publisher of the Romantic period, William Lane’s Minerva Press garnered s...
The success of William Thackeray’s shilling monthly periodical, The Cornhill Magazine, which first a...
The descriptor “hack,” as in hack writer, was slang for a prostitute before becoming common shorthan...