Who Contributed to Late-Eighteenth-Century English Newspapers?

Q2 Arts and Humanities Authorship Pub Date : 2019-12-31 DOI:10.21825/aj.v8i2.15774
J. Kristiansen
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Abstract

A dominant narrative shaping how we view the eighteenth-century English press is that newspapers were important forums for debate and opinion, and that they contributed significantly to the gradual broadening of political participation and inclusion. Yet we still know rather little about the contributors to newspapers in this period, and thus about the social accessibility of this public forum. Based on a systematic reading of six daily newspapers from the politically turbulent years 1790–92, this article explores the following questions: Who contributed to late eighteenth-century English newspapers in this important period? How open was the English press to writers from different social backgrounds? Contributor biography: Johanne Kristiansen holds a PhD from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, where she currently works as an Associate Professor of English Literature. Her PhD thesis explored the relationship between news infrastructure and newspaper management in England in the late eighteenth century, with a particular focus on the role of news culture and its impact on the British response to the French Revolution. Her current research interests include pseudonymous authorship and the financing of political journalism in the long eighteenth century. Introduction Authorship has long been a neglected area of eighteenth-century newspaper studies. In an attempt to settle the vexed question of newspaper accessibility for different social groups, scholars of the late eighteenth-century English newspaper have typically focussed their attention on establishing the identity of newspaper readers. It is, however, equally interesting to ask who the authors of newspaper texts were. According to Hannah Barker and Simon Burrows, political commentary in England was open to ‘ordinary citizens’ who, supposing they could read and write, could reach those in power through letters to newspaper editors (2002, 15). This was certainly a familiar trope in the period, as demonstrated by the rhetoric of newspaper letter writers, but was it actually possible? How ‘ordinary’ were these authors in reality?
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谁对18世纪晚期的英国报纸做出了贡献?
塑造我们如何看待18世纪英国新闻界的一个主要叙事是,报纸是辩论和舆论的重要论坛,它们对逐渐扩大政治参与和包容性做出了重大贡献。然而,我们仍然对这一时期的报纸撰稿人知之甚少,因此对这个公共论坛的社会可及性知之甚少。本文通过对1790-92年政治动荡时期的六份日报的系统阅读,探讨了以下问题:在这一重要时期,谁对18世纪末的英国报纸做出了贡献?英国媒体对来自不同社会背景的作家开放程度如何?撰稿人传记:Johanne Kristiansen拥有挪威科技大学的博士学位,目前担任英国文学副教授。她的博士论文探讨了18世纪末英国新闻基础设施与报纸管理之间的关系,特别关注新闻文化的作用及其对英国应对法国大革命的影响。她目前的研究兴趣包括假名作者和十八世纪政治新闻的资助。引言作者身份一直是十八世纪报纸研究中被忽视的领域。为了解决不同社会群体获得报纸的棘手问题,18世纪末的英国报纸学者通常将注意力集中在确立报纸读者的身份上。然而,同样有趣的是,要问谁是报纸文本的作者。根据Hannah Barker和Simon Burrows的说法,英国的政治评论对“普通公民”开放,如果他们能读写,就可以通过给报纸编辑的信联系当权者(2002年,15年)。正如报纸写信人的花言巧语所证明的那样,这在那个时代无疑是一个熟悉的比喻,但这真的可能吗?这些作者在现实中有多“平凡”?
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CiteScore
0.20
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审稿时长
24 weeks
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