University Press Copublishing Division / Bucknell University Press
Pages: 292
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-61148-416-8 • Hardback • July 2012 • $115.00 • (£88.00)
978-1-61148-595-0 • Paperback • July 2014 • $60.99 • (£47.00)
978-1-61148-417-5 • eBook • June 2012 • $58.00 • (£45.00)
Manushag N. Powell is assistant professor in the English Department at Purdue University. Her research interests are centered on the cultural history of literary forms and include early types of “genre” fiction writing, the periodical essay, and authors-as-characters.
Preface
Chapter 1: Author and Eidolon
- The periodical life cycle
- The Eidolon
- Anonymity?
- Genre and the public sphere
- The performance of authorship; readers as spectators
Chapter 2: Early Periodical Cross-Dressing
- Lucubrations and sexual identity
- Release the Crackenthorpes: The embattled Female Tatler
- War on two fronts: The Female Tatler and the British Apollo
Chapter 3: Performance, Masculinity, and Paper Wars
- The Fielding-Hill Paper War
- Acting manly in the Covent-Garden Journal
- John Hill’s failure to fight
- “Female” warriors enter the fray
- Eidolons on Stage
Chapter 4: Femininity and the Periodical
- Confirmed bachelors and spinsters: Eidolons and the problem of marriage
- “Below the Dignity of the human Species:” Establishing authority in Montagu and Haywood
- The Old Maid: Frances Brooke’s “Freeborn Briton” versus the coffee-house Connoisseur
- Beyond the spinster: Parrots and other Triflers
Chapter 5: No Animal in Nature so Mortal as an Author, or, Death and the Eidolon
- The genre from Hell? Printers’ Devils and News from the Dead
- Periodicals as monuments, and the hope of resurrection
- Corpses, plagiarizers of the dead, and other textual revenants: Grub-Street and Defoe
Bibliography
Preface
Chapter 1: Author and Eidolon
- The periodical life cycle
- The Eidolon
- Anonymity?
- Genre and the public sphere
- The performance of authorship; readers as spectators
Chapter 2: Early Periodical Cross-Dressing
- Lucubrations and sexual identity
- Release the Crackenthorpes: The embattled Female Tatler
- War on two fronts: The Female Tatler and the British Apollo
Chapter 3: Performance, Masculinity, and Paper Wars
- The Fielding-Hill Paper War
- Acting manly in the Covent-Garden Journal
- John Hill’s failure to fight
- “Female” warriors enter the fray
- Eidolons on Stage
Chapter 4: Femininity and the Periodical
- Confirmed bachelors and spinsters: Eidolons and the problem of marriage
- “Below the Dignity of the human Species:” Establishing authority in Montagu and Haywood
- The Old Maid: Frances Brooke’s “Freeborn Briton” versus the coffee-house Connoisseur
- Beyond the spinster: Parrots and other Triflers
Chapter 5: No Animal in Nature so Mortal as an Author, or, Death and the Eidolon
- The genre from Hell? Printers’ Devils and News from the Dead
- Periodicals as monuments, and the hope of resurrection
- Corpses, plagiarizers of the dead, and other textual revenants: Grub-Street and Defoe
Bibliography
Manushag N. Powell’s elegant work pushes further. . .arguments about the complexity of authorial personae in essay periodicals. ... Anyone interested in the wide range of periodicals that claimed to 'police the audience into behaving as an ideal English society,'. . . will find important angles by which to come at these texts. Casting a wider net, Powell also enlightens her reader about lesser-known periodicals. ... Powell’s excellent argument that 'the periodical represents authorship intensified' is well grounded. ... Powell draws a fascinating link between the eidolon and a paperbased economy. . . . Powell’s scholarship is meticulous and robust, and her writing is engaging. She deals with such essential aspects of the genre as anonymity, public-private transgression (the periodical moves beyond the coffee house as a space for reading and discussion), and instances when eidolons grew out of well-known eighteenth-century theatre. ... Even as she explicates the mixture of energy and enervation that informed the eidolon of eighteenth-century essay periodicals, Powell revitalizes our thinking about the genre.
— Eighteenth-Century Fiction
For anyone interested in an up-to-the-moment overview of the broad range of eighteenth-century English periodical literature, written with the invigorating, almost manic energy of its subject matter, Manushag Powell’s Performing Authorship in Eighteenth-Century English Periodicals is a necessary book. As implied by the title, Powell’s study focuses on the eidolon as it 'performs' (as author, character, and citizen of the eidolon world) in the pages of eighteenth-century periodicals—and sometimes outside them. Powell brings to her task a battery of critical approaches, including performance theory, gender theory, feminist theory, and variations on the ‘public sphere,’ but what is most memorable about the book is her wide reading in the primary sources and an associational sprezzatura that generates sometimes brilliant and sometimes risky allusions and syntheses across not only decades but centuries.
— Modern Philology
[T]his new monograph contributes greatly to recent scholarship on the professionalization of authorship in the eighteenth century.
— Modern Language Review
Manushag N. Powell begins with a strong case based on internet blogging for the relevance today of the personae created within eighteenth-century essay periodicals, literary periodicals made up largely by an essay and correspondence to the essayist. . . .[I]n the end I was won over by all I had learned and Powell’s critical insights and sound judgments. I was won over, too, by prose style and persona--qualities of a successful periodical.
— The Eighteenth-Century Intelligencer