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Dickens, Reynolds, and Mayhew on Wellington Street

Book

Dickens, Reynolds, and Mayhew on Wellington Street

DOI link for Dickens, Reynolds, and Mayhew on Wellington Street

Dickens, Reynolds, and Mayhew on Wellington Street book

The Print Culture of a Victorian Street

Dickens, Reynolds, and Mayhew on Wellington Street

DOI link for Dickens, Reynolds, and Mayhew on Wellington Street

Dickens, Reynolds, and Mayhew on Wellington Street book

The Print Culture of a Victorian Street
ByMary L. Shannon
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2015
eBook Published 1 March 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315577067
Pages 278
eBook ISBN 9781315577067
Subjects Humanities, Language & Literature
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Shannon, M.L. (2015). Dickens, Reynolds, and Mayhew on Wellington Street: The Print Culture of a Victorian Street (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315577067

ABSTRACT

A glance over the back pages of mid-nineteenth-century newspapers and periodicals published in London reveals that Wellington Street stands out among imprint addresses. Between 1843 and 1853, Household Words, Reynolds’s Weekly Newspaper, the Examiner, Punch, the Athenaeum, the Spectator, the Morning Post, and the serial edition of London Labour and the London Poor, to name a few, were all published from this short street off the Strand. Mary L. Shannon identifies, for the first time, the close proximity of the offices of Charles Dickens, G.W.M. Reynolds, and Henry Mayhew, examining the ramifications for the individual authors and for nineteenth-century publishing. What are the implications of Charles Dickens, his arch-competitor the radical publisher G.W.M. Reynolds, and Henry Mayhew being such close neighbours? Given that London was capital of more than Britain alone, what connections does Wellington Street reveal between London print networks and the print culture and networks of the wider empire? How might the editors’ experiences make us rethink the ways in which they and others addressed their anonymous readers as ’friends’, as if they were part of their immediate social network? As Shannon shows, readers in the London of the 1840s and '50s, despite advances in literacy, print technology, and communications, were not simply an ’imagined community’ of individuals who read in silent privacy, but active members of an imagined network that punctured the anonymity of the teeming city and even the empire.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|48 pages

Morning: ‘The Smallness of the World’

chapter 2|44 pages

Afternoon: ‘Dissolute and Idle Persons’ Delinquency on the Streets and on the Page: G.W.M Reynolds

chapter 3|52 pages

Evening: ‘The Showman Introduces Himself’

chapter 4|48 pages

Night: ‘The Compass of the World and They That Dwell Therein’

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