ABSTRACT

At the turn of the twentieth century, the publishing industries in Britain and the United States underwent dramatic expansions and reorganization that brought about an increased traffic in books and periodicals around the world. Focusing on adventure fiction published from 1899 to 1919, Patrick Scott Belk looks at authors such as Joseph Conrad, H.G. Wells, Conan Doyle, and John Buchan to explore how writers of popular fiction engaged with foreign markets and readers through periodical publishing. Belk argues that popular fiction, particularly the adventure genre, developed in ways that directly correlate with authors’ experiences, and shows that popular genres of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries emerged as one way of marketing their literary works to expanding audiences of readers worldwide. Despite an over-determined print space altered by the rise of new kinds of consumers and transformations of accepted habits of reading, publishing, and writing, the changes in British and American publishing at the turn of the twentieth century inspired an exciting new period of literary invention and experimentation in the adventure genre, and the greater part of that invention and experimentation was happening in the magazines. ​

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

Print in Transition: Magazines, Adventure, and Threats of New Media, 1880–1920

chapter 1|47 pages

Empires of Print

An Imperial History of Late Nineteenth-Century Periodical Expansion

chapter 2|29 pages

Imperial Technologies

Adventure and the Threat of New Media in Conrad’s Lord Jim (1899)

chapter 3|37 pages

Transatlantic Crossings

The Technological Scene of H.G. Wells’s Tono-Bungay (1909)

chapter 4|34 pages

Spectacular Texts

Conan Doyle’s Essays on Photography and The Lost World (1912)

chapter 5|31 pages

Deciphered Codes

John Buchan in All-Story Weekly (1915) and The Popular Magazine (1919)

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

Lost in Transit: Sax Rohmer, Conan Doyle, and Baroness Orczy’s Eldorado (1913) in Africa