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'Pamela' in the Marketplace
Literary Controversy and Print Culture in Eighteenth-Century Britain and Ireland
A definitive account of the enormous cultural impact of the first true novel in English, Samuel Richardson's Pamela (1740).
Thomas Keymer (Author), Peter Sabor (Author)
9780521813372, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 15 December 2005
306 pages, 14 b/w illus.
23.5 x 16 x 2.5 cm, 0.62 kg
' … a lively and informative analysis … admirable and enjoyable …' Notes and Queries
Samuel Richardson's Pamela (1740) is often regarded as the first true novel in English and a landmark in literary history. The best-selling novel of its time, it provoked a swarm of responses: panegyrics and critiques, parodies and burlesques, piracies and sequels, comedies and operas. The controversy it inspired has become a standard point of reference in studies of the rise of the novel, the history of the book and the emergence of consumer culture. In the first book-length study of the Pamela controversy since 1960, Thomas Keymer and Peter Sabor offer a definitive account of the novel's enormous cultural impact. Above all, they read the controversy as a market phenomenon, in which the writers and publishers involved were competing not only in struggles of interpretation and meaning but also in the larger and more pressing enterprise of selling print.
Introduction
1. 'The selling part': publication, promotion, profits
2. Literary property and the trade in continuations
3. Counter-fictions and novel production
4. Domestic servitude and the licensed stage
5. Pamela illustrations and the visual culture of the novel
6. Commercial morality, colonial nationalism, and Pamela's Irish reception
Afterword
Appendix. A chronology of publications, performances and related events to 1750
Select bibliography
Index.
Subject Areas: Literary studies: general [DSB]