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The Rise of Celebrity Authorship: Nineteenth-Century Print Culture and Antislavery

The Rise of Celebrity Authorship: Nineteenth-Century Print Culture and Antislavery - Paperback

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The Rise of Celebrity Authorship: Nineteenth-Century Print Culture and Antislavery

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Availability:In StockContributor:Sarah Danielle AllisonPublish date:8/19/2025Pages:264
Language:EnglishPublisher:Columbia University PressISBN-13:9780231209717ISBN-10:231209711UPC:9780231209717Book Category:Literary CriticismBook Subcategory:American, Modern, English, Irish, Scottish, WelshBook Topic:19th CenturySize:8.50 x 5.50 x 0.60 inchesWeight:0.6812Product ID:SC48P0QY5K

Literary celebrity in the nineteenth century emerged from a miscellaneous array of trending print forms, including antislavery writing, which was a popular, consumable form of literature in the period. Antislavery print culture could function as a pop culture, leveraging cultural myths about gender and authorship through print forms that connected readers with writers: printed collections of author signatures, descriptions of writers' homes, autobiography, biography, and travel writing. The Rise of Celebrity Authorship traces surprising relations among figures and across shared forms in the period: What do antislavery forms and figures tell us about literary celebrity and the networks of transatlantic print culture?

Sarah Danielle Allison illuminates the collective creation of celebrity by tracing unexpected connections within this anarchic nineteenth-century literary marketplace. Bringing together book history with more recent computational approaches, The Rise of Celebrity Authorship shifts focus from the conventional literary work of major writers to the breadth of print forms circulating around them. Allison considers a variety of texts adjacent to the novel, including Edgar Allan Poe's satire of autograph collecting, antislavery gift books, and a Southern travelogue by the Swedish writer Frederika Bremer. She draws striking parallels between two starkly different 1858 texts: Elizabeth Gaskell's biography of Charlotte Brontë, which sought to unearth the reality behind Jane Eyre, and Josiah Henson's autobiography, which circulated as the life of the "original Uncle Tom." A rich account of the competing and complementary forces that shape images of authors, this book reveals the collaborative work of literary production and celebrity.
Language:EnglishPublisher:Columbia University PressISBN-13:9780231209717ISBN-10:231209711UPC:9780231209717Book Category:Literary CriticismBook Subcategory:American, Modern, English, Irish, Scottish, WelshBook Topic:19th CenturySize:8.50 x 5.50 x 0.60 inchesWeight:0.6812Product ID:SC48P0QY5K
Sarah Danielle Allison is an associate professor of English and Hutchinson Distinguished Professor at Loyola University New Orleans. She is the author of Reductive Reading: A Syntax of Victorian Moralizing (2018).
Publisher: Columbia University Press

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