The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal
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Page : 564 pages
File Size : 25,74 MB
Release : 1836
Category : English literature
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Author :
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Page : 564 pages
File Size : 25,74 MB
Release : 1836
Category : English literature
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Page : 596 pages
File Size : 50,19 MB
Release : 1824
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Author : Professor Jason Camlot
Publisher : Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
Page : 214 pages
File Size : 23,8 MB
Release : 2013-04-28
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1409474992
In analyzing the nonfiction works of writers such as John Wilson, J. S. Mill, De Quincy, Ruskin, Arnold, Pater, and Wilde, Jason Camlot provides an important context for the nineteenth-century critic's changing ideas about style, rhetoric, and technologies of communication. In particular, Camlot contributes to our understanding of how new print media affected the Romantic and Victorian critic's sense of self, as he elaborates the ways nineteenth-century critics used their own essays on rhetoric and stylistics to speculate about the changing conditions for the production and reception of ideas and the formulation of authorial character. Camlot argues that the early 1830s mark the moment when a previously coherent tradition of pragmatic rhetoric was fragmented and redistributed into the diverse, localized sites of an emerging periodicals market. Publishing venues for writers multiplied at midcentury, establishing a new stylistic norm for criticism-one that affirmed style as the manifestation of English discipline and objectivity. The figure of the professional critic soon subsumed the authority of the polyglot intellectual, and the later decades of the nineteenth century brought about a debate on aesthetics and criticism that set ideals of Saxon-rooted 'virile' style against more culturally inclusive theories of expression.
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Page : 476 pages
File Size : 43,86 MB
Release : 1921
Category : History
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Author : Saint Louis (Mo.). Mercantile Library
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Page : 160 pages
File Size : 35,49 MB
Release : 1876
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Author : Charles Duke Yonge
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Page : 264 pages
File Size : 45,64 MB
Release : 1888
Category : Authors, Scottish
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Page : 244 pages
File Size : 42,89 MB
Release : 1909
Category : American periodicals
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Page : 640 pages
File Size : 11,44 MB
Release : 1819
Category : English literature
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Author : Providence Public Library (R.I.)
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Page : 418 pages
File Size : 36,35 MB
Release : 1897
Category : Classified catalogs
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Author : Erkki Huhtamo
Publisher : MIT Press
Page : 461 pages
File Size : 45,66 MB
Release : 2023-08-22
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0262547546
Tracing the cultural, material, and discursive history of an early manifestation of media culture in the making. Beginning in the late eighteenth century, huge circular panoramas presented their audiences with resplendent representations that ranged from historic battles to exotic locations. Such panoramas were immersive but static. There were other panoramas that moved—hundreds, and probably thousands of them. Their history has been largely forgotten. In Illusions in Motion, Erkki Huhtamo excavates this neglected early manifestation of media culture in the making. The moving panorama was a long painting that unscrolled behind a “window” by means of a mechanical cranking system, accompanied by a lecture, music, and sometimes sound and light effects. Showmen exhibited such panoramas in venues that ranged from opera houses to church halls, creating a market for mediated realities in both city and country. In the first history of this phenomenon, Huhtamo analyzes the moving panorama in all its complexity, investigating its relationship to other media and its role in the culture of its time. In his telling, the panorama becomes a window for observing media in operation. Huhtamo explores such topics as cultural forms that anticipated the moving panorama; theatrical panoramas; the diorama; the "panoramania" of the 1850s and the career of Albert Smith, the most successful showman of that era; competition with magic lantern shows; the final flowering of the panorama in the late nineteenth century; and the panorama's afterlife as a topos, traced through its evocation in literature, journalism, science, philosophy, and propaganda.