ABSTRACT

This volume provides engaging accounts with transmedia practices in the long nineteenth century and offers model analyses of Victorian media (e.g., theater, advertising, books, games, newspapers) alongside the technological, economic, and cultural conditions under which they emerged in the Anglophone world.

By exploring engagement tactics and forms of audience participation, the book affords insight into the role that social agents – e.g., individual authors, publishing houses, theatre show producers, lithograph companies, toy manufacturers, newspaper syndicates, or advertisers – played in the production, distribution, and consumption of Victorian media. It considers such examples as Sherlock Holmes, Kewpie Dolls, media forms and practices such as cut-outs, popular lectures, telephone conversations or early theater broadcasting, and such authors as Nellie Bly, Mark Twain, and Walter Besant, offering insight into the variety of transmedia practices present in the long nineteenth century.

The book brings together methods and theories from comics studies, communication and media studies, English and American studies, narratology and more, and proposes fresh ways to think about transmediality. Though the target audiences are students, teachers, and scholars in the humanities, the book will also resonate with non-academic readers interested in how media contents are produced, disseminated, and consumed, and with what implications.

part I|72 pages

Technology, culture, democracy

chapter 2|20 pages

Literary events and real policies

The transmedia cases of Walter Besant's All Sorts and Conditions of Men (1882) and George Chesney's The Battle of Dorking (1871)

chapter 3|17 pages

Telephonic conversations

The phone and transmedia competition in the culture of the progressive era

part II|53 pages

Crossroads of fact and fiction

chapter 6|16 pages

Transmedia practices toward a popular cultural sphere

Lippard, Thompson, and nineteenth-century serialities

chapter 7|18 pages

“She lectured and attended lectures”

Transmedia practices and female vocality in late-nineteenth-century cultures of public lecturing and mass print

chapter 8|17 pages

Mobilizations

How Nellie Bly traveled the world

part III|39 pages

Transmedia Sherlock

chapter 9|17 pages

“To just steal the name of a character”

Arthur Conan Doyle, Sherlock Holmes, and the conditions of transmedia dispersion

chapter 10|20 pages

Creating transmedia fan engagement in Victorian periodicals

The case of Sherlock Holmes