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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Maura Ives , Ann R. HawkinsPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9781138254220ISBN 10: 1138254223 Pages: 296 Publication Date: 30 November 2016 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsContents: Preface; Introduction: women writers and the artifacts of celebrity, Maura Ives; Celebrity and anonymity in the Monthly Review's notices of 19th-century novels, Stephanie Eckroth; 'Faultless herself, as nearly as human nature can be': the construction of Jane Austen's public image, 1817-1917, Katie Halsey; The portrait, the beauty, and the book: celebrity and the Countess of Blessington, Ann R. Hawkins; 'A place among its more successful sisters': Louisa May Alcott's wayward Moods, Catherine S. Blackwell; 'The summit of an author's fame': Victorian women writers and the Birthday Book, Maura Ives; 'Almost idolatrous love': Caroline Dall, Sarah Knowles Bolton, Mary C. Crawford and the case of Elizabeth Whitman, Jennifer Harris; Women writers and celebrity news at the fin de siècle, Alexis Easley; 'A characteristic product of the present era': gender and celebrity in Helen C. Black's Notable Women Authors of the Day (1893), Troy J. Bassett; Presenting Alice Meynell: the book, the photograph, and the calendar, Linda H. Peterson; Motherhood, authorship, and rivalry: sons' memoirs of the lives of Ellen Price Wood and Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Jennifer Phegley; Commodifying the self: portraits of the artist in the novels of Marie Corelli, Lizzie White; Pauline Johnson and celebrity in Canada: 'the most unique fixture in the literary world of today', Carole Gerson; Works cited; Index.ReviewsThis immensely interesting and informative volume elegantly maps the ways in which women writers participated in celebrity culture through printed and visual artifacts. In offering probing analyses of the sometimes vexed relationship between celebrity status and critical success for writers whose gender and popularity could occlude recognition of their aesthetic brilliance, this collection makes an essential contribution to our understanding of the literary history of women writers. --Harriet Kramer Linkin, New Mexico State University, USA These essays show the close connections between the artifacts of celebrity and the discourses of celebrity, and the ways in which the two can meld together in a printed codex... The conjunction of gender, celebrity and material culture make this book essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the cultural history of literary celebrity in the nineteenth century. --Review 19 Women Writers and the Artifacts of Celebrity in the Long Nineteenth Century paints a dazzling kaleidoscope of the manner in which artifacts were used to reveal more details about the nature of celebrity culture and how various objects were utilised as a means to celebrate or marginalise women's artistic achievements. --The Latchkey This stimulating essay collection is another addition to burgeoning studies of literary celebrity: its value derives from its ability to bring together the discourses of gender and women's writing with the current critical interest in material culture. The greatest strength of this collection is its focus on what the title labels 'artifacts of celebrity', which are invariably printed and in visual forms. --Literature and History This immensely interesting and informative volume elegantly maps the ways in which women writers participated in celebrity culture through printed and visual artifacts. In offering probing analyses of the sometimes vexed relationship between celebrity status and critical success for writers whose gender and popularity could occlude recognition of their aesthetic brilliance, this collection makes an essential contribution to our understanding of the literary history of women writers. --Harriet Kramer Linkin, New Mexico State University, USA These essays show the close connections between the artifacts of celebrity and the discourses of celebrity, and the ways in which the two can meld together in a printed codex... The conjunction of gender, celebrity and material culture make this book essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the cultural history of literary celebrity in the nineteenth century. --Review 19 Women Writers and the Artifacts of Celebrity in the Long Nineteenth Century paints a dazzling kaleidoscope of the manner in which artifacts were used to reveal more details about the nature of celebrity culture and how various objects were utilised as a means to celebrate or marginalise women's artistic achievements. --The Latchkey This stimulating essay collection is another addition to burgeoning studies of literary celebrity: its value derives from its ability to bring together the discourses of gender and women's writing with the current critical interest in material culture. The greatest strength of this collection is its focus on what the title labels 'artifacts of celebrity', which are invariably printed and in visual forms. --Literature and History Author InformationAnn R. Hawkins is Professor of Bibliography in the Department of English at Texas Tech University, and Maura Ives is Associate Professor of English at Texas A&M University, USA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |