The Home Library of Useful Knowledge
Title | The Home Library of Useful Knowledge PDF eBook |
Author | Richard S. Peale |
Publisher | |
Pages | 846 |
Release | 1886 |
Genre | Encyclopedias and dictionaries |
ISBN |
Shaping Information
Title | Shaping Information PDF eBook |
Author | Charles Kostelnick |
Publisher | SIU Press |
Pages | 284 |
Release | 2003 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 9780809325023 |
In this wide-ranging analysis, Charles Kostelnick and Michael Hassett demonstrate how visual language in professional communication--text design, data displays, illustrations--is shaped by conventional practices that are invented, codified, and modified by users in visual discourse communities.
Old Style
Title | Old Style PDF eBook |
Author | Claudia Stokes |
Publisher | University of Pennsylvania Press |
Pages | 273 |
Release | 2021-12-14 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0812298160 |
An aesthetic of unoriginality shaped literary style and reader taste for decades of the nineteenth century. While critics in the twentieth century and beyond have upheld originality and innovation as essential characteristics of literary achievement, they were not features particularly prized by earlier American audiences, Claudia Stokes contends. On the contrary, readers were taught to value familiarity, traditionalism, and regularity. Literary originality was often seen as a mark of vulgar sensationalism and poor quality. In Old Style Stokes offers the first dedicated study of a forgotten nineteenth-century aesthetic, explicating the forms, practices, conventions, and uses of unoriginality. She focuses in particular on the second quarter of the century, when improvements in printing and distribution caused literary markets to become flooded with new material, and longstanding reading practices came under threat. As readers began to prefer novelty to traditional forms, advocates openly extolled unoriginality in an effort to preserve the old literary ways. Old Style examines this era of significant literary change, during which a once-dominant aesthetic started to give way to modern preferences. If writing in the old style came to be associated with elite conservatism—a linkage that contributed to its decline in the twentieth century—it also, paradoxically provided marginalized writers—people of color, white women, and members of the working class—the literary credentials they needed to enter print. Writing in the old style could affirm an aspiring author's training, command of convention, and respectability. In dismissing unoriginality as the literary purview of the untalented or unambitious, Stokes cautions, we risk overlooking something of vital importance to generations of American writers and readers.
Travels into Print
Title | Travels into Print PDF eBook |
Author | Innes M. Keighren |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 395 |
Release | 2015-05-11 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 022623357X |
In eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Britain, books of travel and exploration were much more than simply the printed experiences of intrepid authors. They were works of both artistry and industry—products of the complex, and often contested, relationships between authors and editors, publishers and printers. These books captivated the reading public and played a vital role in creating new geographical truths. In an age of global wonder and of expanding empires, there was no publisher more renowned for its travel books than the House of John Murray. Drawing on detailed examination of the John Murray Archive of manuscripts, images, and the firm’s correspondence with its many authors—a list that included such illustrious explorers and scientists as Charles Darwin and Charles Lyell, and literary giants like Jane Austen, Lord Byron, and Sir Walter Scott—Travels into Print considers how journeys of exploration became published accounts and how travelers sought to demonstrate the faithfulness of their written testimony and to secure their personal credibility. This fascinating study in historical geography and book history takes modern readers on a journey into the nature of exploration, the production of authority in published travel narratives, and the creation of geographical authorship—a journey bound together by the unifying force of a world-leading publisher.
The Literary World
Title | The Literary World PDF eBook |
Author | Evert Augustus Duykinck |
Publisher | |
Pages | 640 |
Release | 1847 |
Genre | Books |
ISBN |
The Best Reading: 1886-91
Title | The Best Reading: 1886-91 PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 140 |
Release | 1892 |
Genre | American literature |
ISBN |
Author List of the New Hampshire State Library, June 1, 1902 ...
Title | Author List of the New Hampshire State Library, June 1, 1902 ... PDF eBook |
Author | New Hampshire State Library |
Publisher | |
Pages | 866 |
Release | 1904 |
Genre | American literature |
ISBN |