scholarly journals Contents of the serial publication “Mikhailovskaya Pushkiniana”. Issues 1–50 (1996–2010)

2022 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. 42-117
Author(s):  
Ludmila Belyaeva ◽  
Elena Valuiskaya
Keyword(s):  
2020 ◽  
pp. 26-58
Author(s):  
Jessica R. Valdez

While Benedict Anderson has argued that newspapers enable readers to imagine national community, Charles Dickens’s writings are attentive to the varying ways that the newspaper press might shape, inhibit, or fragment community through its uncontrolled production of miscellaneous content and matter. This first chapter shows the growing distinction that Dickens drew between fiction and nonfiction, novel and newspaper, in his communal visions for serial publication. Early Dickens characterised the newspaper press as a meteorological force of destruction, a thunderstorm threatening to engulf the city of London, yet continually produced to meet the endless public appetite for more news. Over the course of his career, Dickens experimented with other metaphors for the working of serial narrative and its influence on a reading public. From an intangible creature telling stories to a weaver at his loom, Dickens encourages readers to see the instance of a particular serial output linked to its larger structure over time. In doing so, he privileges the power of serial fiction to cultivate new ways of envisioning community.


1958 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-142
Author(s):  
Donald F. Bond
Keyword(s):  

2010 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 12-16
Author(s):  
M. Gavin
Keyword(s):  

1970 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 94-98
Author(s):  
Rosemary T. VanArsdel

Justification is no longer necessary for the importance of research in Victorian periodicals, nor for the clear and very special window which periodicals offer into the life and thought of the nineteenth century. The pressing problem is how best to use the plethora of resource which exists, and how to render useful to the scholar the mountains of material which remain essentially un-catalogued. If we accept as a temporary definition of a Victorian periodical “a serial publication, issued more than once a year, part (at least) of whose run falls within the span 1824-1900,” we find documentation to show that at least 16,000 of these periodicals were published during the Victorian era, and it is by no means certain that that figure is exhaustive. Within this framework can be found every conceivable variety of opinion, debate, political posturing and social commentary. If one were able to select one year, say at mid-century, and sample from each of the 16,000 periodicals what a kaleidescopic glance into an era would be provided. Since this is neither practical nor likely to happen until the humanists' use of computer skills becomes more sophisticated, it remains for the literary and historical scholars to develop other means of mastering the diffuse, and at times elusive, material.In the past twelve years a number of distinguished men and women, both in the United States and in England, have applied themselves to initial problems of periodical research and as a result there have been at least four outstanding milestones laid on the pathway. The first of these, the very prestigious accomplishment by Professor Walter E. Houghton, of Wellesley College, was the establishment of the 15-20 year project, The Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals (WI), the first volume of which appeared in 1966. (The second volume is projected for 1971, and the third for 1976, with the question of a fourth undecided.) This project was born about 1958, of Houghton's own frustration in trying to make use of periodicals while writing The Victorian Frame of Mind. As a result, he and his wife, Esther Rhoads Houghton, set out to provide a new tool to study Victorian men and ideas.


2004 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-114
Author(s):  
Christine Miskin

The journal PLC was a worthy winner of the BIALL Serials Award for 2003. PLC, which has been regularly nominated for the award by BIALL members, was in competition with almost a dozen other journals. The adjudication panel agreed that PLC is a journal which has attained excellence in quality, innovation and originality, especially in its presentation of information, as a print journal. It has also successfully meshed print with online to produce a truly new era product.


1958 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 554 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Clive ◽  
R. M. Wiles
Keyword(s):  

1958 ◽  
Vol 73 (8) ◽  
pp. 615
Author(s):  
W. S. Ward ◽  
R. M. Wiles
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
John Feather

The British book trade evolved into a fully modern industry during this period. Its modernity was signalled by more effective copyright laws, clearer divisions of labour and responsibility, and the emergence of publishing as a distinctive branch of the trade. The period saw a significant increase in the publication of fiction as a purely commercial phenomenon. Publishers, booksellers, the owners of circulating libraries, and authors all benefited from this. New and more standardized formats developed, including the ‘three-decker’ and the one-volume cheap reprint, which were to characterize much of the nineteenth-century fiction industry, and at the same time the old practice of serial publication was revived from the early 1830s onwards in several forms. Fiction publishing was a business—and by the end of the period it was a commercially significant business.


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