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G.W.M. Reynolds
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G.W.M. Reynolds book
G.W.M. Reynolds
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G.W.M. Reynolds book
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ABSTRACT
G.W.M. Reynolds (1814-1879) had a major impact on the mid-Victorian era that until now has been largely unacknowledged. A prolific novelist whose work had a massive circulation, and an influential journalist and editor, he was a man of contradictions in both his life and writing: a middle-class figure who devoted his life to working class issues but seldom missed a chance to profit from the exploitation of current issues; the founder of the radical newspaper Reynolds Weekly, as well as a bestselling author of historical romances, gothic and sensation novels, oriental tales, and domestic fiction; a perennial bankrupt who nevertheless ended his life prosperously. A figure of such diversity requires a collaborative study. Bringing together a distinguished group of scholars, this volume does justice to the full range of Reynolds's achievement and influence. With proper emphasis on new work in the field, the contributors take on Reynolds's involvement with Chartism, serial publication, the mass market periodical, commodity culture, and the introduction of French literature into British consciousness, to name just a few of the topics covered. The Mysteries of London, the century's most widely read serial, receives the extensive treatment this long-running urban gothic work deserves. Adding to the volume's usefulness are comprehensive bibliographies of Reynolds's own writings and secondary criticism relevant to the study of this central figure in mid-nineteenth-century Britain.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
PART I: Beginnings: France
chapter |14 pages
PART I: Beginnings: France 1G.W.M. Reynolds and the Modern Literature of France
chapter 2|18 pages
The French Connection: G.W.M. Reynolds and the Outlaw Robert Macaire
part |2 pages
PART II: Politics and the Periodical Press
chapter 6|22 pages
‘Some Little or Contemptible War upon her Hands’: Reynolds’s Newspaper and Empire
part |2 pages
PART III: The Urban Mysteries
chapter 8|14 pages
Lost in Translation: The Relationship between Eugène Sue’s Les Mystères de Paris and G.W.M. Reynolds’s The Mysteries of London
chapter 9|14 pages
The Wrongs and Crimes of the Poor: The Urban Underworld of The Mysteries of London in Context
part |2 pages
PART IV: Popular Culture
chapter 11|20 pages
Time, Politics and the Symbolic Imagination in Reynolds’s Social Melodrama
chapter 12|12 pages
Reynolds’s ‘Memoirs’ Series and ‘The Literature of the Kitchen’
chapter 13|14 pages
The Virtue of Illegitimacy: Inheritance and Belonging in The Dark Woman and Mary Price
chapter 14|20 pages
The Mysteries of Reading: Text and Illustration in the Fiction of G.W.M. Reynolds
part |2 pages
PART V: Afterlife