The Framework of Fiction: Socio-cultural Approaches to the Novel |
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Page 196
... paperback is only one ingredient in its success . It is probably the least important ingredient although such technological developments as the use of the rotary magazine press and the application of synthetic glue rather than sewn ...
... paperback is only one ingredient in its success . It is probably the least important ingredient although such technological developments as the use of the rotary magazine press and the application of synthetic glue rather than sewn ...
Page 197
... paperbacks - ' genre ' paperbacks which were normally original works without literary pretensions , such as the Mills and Boon novels . The growing paperback market ( 30 per cent of the total book market by the 1970s ) made it possible ...
... paperbacks - ' genre ' paperbacks which were normally original works without literary pretensions , such as the Mills and Boon novels . The growing paperback market ( 30 per cent of the total book market by the 1970s ) made it possible ...
Page 198
... paperback . Hard selling and heavy advertising have supported this ' reprint pattern ' , in which the emphasis is on a new wave of titles making an impact each month . A second approach is one which emphasises not the novelty but the ...
... paperback . Hard selling and heavy advertising have supported this ' reprint pattern ' , in which the emphasis is on a new wave of titles making an impact each month . A second approach is one which emphasises not the novelty but the ...
Contents
Theoretical Approaches | 21 |
Defoe and Richardson | 59 |
Varieties of Conservative | 87 |
Copyright | |
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The Framework of Fiction: Socio-cultural Approaches to the Novel John Bull No preview available - 1988 |
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aesthetic Altick appears artistic attempt Barton Bond novels bourgeois chapter characters circulating libraries claims Clarissa contemporary conventional Crusoe culture D. H. Lawrence despite Dickens Dickens's Eagleton economic edition Engels English Literature example expectations F. R. Leavis Gaskell genre Goldmann Hardy Hardy's hero ideology individual influence instalment Jane Austen John Lawrence's Leavis literary criticism Lukács marriage Marxist Mary Barton middle middle-class Mudie Mudie's nineteenth century novelists Oliver Twist origins paperback Penguin edn period political popular fiction pressures production publishers Puritan Raymond Williams readers readership reading public realism Reception Theory reflect regarded relation relationship reprints Richard Altick Richardson role Scott serial serialised social context socio-cultural approach Sociology of Literature Sons and Lovers structure Suvin Terry Eagleton Tess theory Thomas Hardy three-decker three-volume Thunderball Tillotson Tony Bennett traditional values Victorian Waverley Williams women working-class world vision writers