EBOOK

Slow Print

Literary Radicalism and Late Victorian Print Culture

Elizabeth Carolyn Miller
(0)
Pages
392
Year
2013
Language
English

About

This book explores the literary culture of Britain's radical press from 1880 to 1910, a time that saw a flourishing of radical political activity as well as the emergence of a mass print industry. While Enlightenment radicals and their heirs had seen free print as an agent of revolutionary transformation, socialist, anarchist and other radicals of this later period suspected that a mass public could not exist outside the capitalist system. In response, they purposely reduced the scale of print by appealing to a small, counter-cultural audience. "Slow print," like "slow food" today, actively resisted industrial production and the commercialization of new domains of life. Drawing on under-studied periodicals and archives, this book uncovers a largely forgotten literary-political context. It looks at the extensive debate within the radical press over how to situate radical values within an evolving media ecology, debates that engaged some of the most famous writers of the era (William Morris and George Bernard Shaw), a host of lesser-known figures (theosophical socialist and birth control reformer Annie Besant, gay rights pioneer Edward Carpenter, and proto-modernist editor Alfred Orage), and countless anonymous others.

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Reviews

"Slow Print is one of a rare species: a study that manages to encompass the whole breadth and depth of late Victorian radical culture . . . There are few books currently in print that demonstrate as firm a mastery of both the historical and the literary aspects of that culture that draw on such a wide range of primary print sources, or that so deftly situate the well-trodden solitary peaks of lite
Journal of Pre-Raphaelite Studies
"Elizabeth Carolyn Miller's monograph treats late Victorian literary radicalism, a relatively neglected area, with an inventive paradigm on anticapitalist or 'slow' print culture . . . Miller's archive of texts is fascinating and provocative as well as fresh, and hopefully she will not be the only scholar to mine its riches."
NOVEL
"[T]he virtue of Miller's book is its focus on the largely forgotten context of socialist print culture from which William Morris and other familiar writers such as George Bernard Shaw emerged . . . The thirty-plus illustrations in Slow Print are extremely valuable . . . Students of nineteenth-century periodicals will no doubt use this book selectively, while those with a particular interest in so
Victorian Periodicals Review

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