{"title":"工作与 19 世纪的报刊:安德鲁-金编辑的《活人的活计》(评论)","authors":"Françoise Baillet","doi":"10.1353/vpr.2023.a927886","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press: Living Work for Living People</em> ed. by Andrew King <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Françoise Baillet (bio) </li> </ul> Andrew King, ed., <em>Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press: Living Work for Living People</em> ( New York: Routledge, 2022), pp. xiii + 240, $160.00/£125.00 hardcover, $48.99/£35.99 paperback and e-book. <p>Labour occupied a prominent position in Victorian public discourse. After the Reform Bill of 1832 gave power to the wealthy middle classes, rhetorical constructions increasingly associated labour with manhood and respectability. In line with the principles of evangelical Christianity and under the influence of thinkers such as Thomas Carlyle—\"<em>Laborare est Orare</em>. Work is worship\" (<em>Past and Present</em>, 1843)—and Samuel Smiles, whose <em>Self-Help</em> (1859) was an instant success, Victorians emphasised work as the condition and instrument of self-improvement. The press played a decisive role in the formulation and dissemination of such values. <em>Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press: Living Work for Living People</em> (2022) precisely addresses this situation, investigating the content, form, and impact of the labour discourse in the pages of trade periodicals or under the pen of professionals. Edited by Andrew King, whose work on the Victorian period lies at the junction between literature, history, media studies, and sociology, this ten-chapter volume derives from the BLT19 project (https://www.blt19.co.uk/), a database of nineteenth-century business, labour, trade, and temperance magazines King launched in 2016. It is published as a complement to <em>The Routledge Handbook to Nineteenth-Century Periodicals and Newspapers</em> (edited by Andrew King, Alexis Easley, and John Morton, 2016) and <em>Researching the Nineteenth-Century Press: Case Studies</em> (edited by Easley, King, and Morton, 2017).</p> <p>Beyond work's centrality as a benchmark of Victorian value, it was a cultural construction formulated and widely disseminated by the press. Pervading all sections of specialised periodicals, the labour rhetoric pertained to five areas: bodily and intellectual practice, social and commercial exchange, class, Christian value, and moral imperative. As King suggests in his introduction to <em>Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press</em>, this set of values can be used as a road map to the whole volume (7). The subsequent chapters assess this discourse as it was circulated by a selection of trade and business periodicals or through the writings of several well-known <strong>[End Page 516]</strong> figures connected to the printing business. In chapter 2, Andrew Hobbs shows how provincial newspapers and periodicals quickly became \"an information technology, providing an infrastructure which assisted efficient trade and employment\" (38). Analysing the trade, professional, and work-related content of six local publications spanning the second half of the century, Hobbs sheds light on the omnipresence of business news in newspapers' columns and reveals the strong connection between publishers and local business interests. This approach is very much in keeping with the \"taxonomies and procedures\" of chapter 3, in which King suggests fresh ways of looking at the field of Victorian periodicals studies. Using the example of the BLT19 project, King calls attention to the transformational and cultural potential of classification processes in digital humanities. \"The question of how we map fields of inquiry and classify units of those fields,\" he writes, determines the ways in which we understand the world (61).</p> <p>Chapters 4 and 6 both deal with (auto)biographical constructions of the nineteenth-century professional. In \"The Page as Stage,\" Anna Maria Barry examines the way in which male opera singers used the press to advertise their skills and promote their professional interests. Flore Janssen, in chapter 6, chooses the example of Margaret Harkness (1854–1923), a nurse turned journalist and novelist, to comment on representations of nursing in Victorian periodicals. Harkness's writings, Janssen remarks, raise contradictions in the representation of nursing as work but also testify to a degree of evolution in the perception of female employment (111). Strongly enmeshed with Victorian assumptions about social, national, and ideological worth, professional identities were constantly renegotiated through the press. Both Deborah Canavan, in chapter 5, and Rachel Calder, in chapter 7, tackle this complex issue, showing how, in the context of highly volatile markets and mutable careers, workers used the printed page to establish and maintain their public status. For the...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":44337,"journal":{"name":"Victorian Periodicals Review","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press: Living Work for Living People ed. by Andrew King (review)\",\"authors\":\"Françoise Baillet\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/vpr.2023.a927886\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press: Living Work for Living People</em> ed. by Andrew King <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Françoise Baillet (bio) </li> </ul> Andrew King, ed., <em>Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press: Living Work for Living People</em> ( New York: Routledge, 2022), pp. xiii + 240, $160.00/£125.00 hardcover, $48.99/£35.99 paperback and e-book. <p>Labour occupied a prominent position in Victorian public discourse. After the Reform Bill of 1832 gave power to the wealthy middle classes, rhetorical constructions increasingly associated labour with manhood and respectability. In line with the principles of evangelical Christianity and under the influence of thinkers such as Thomas Carlyle—\\\"<em>Laborare est Orare</em>. Work is worship\\\" (<em>Past and Present</em>, 1843)—and Samuel Smiles, whose <em>Self-Help</em> (1859) was an instant success, Victorians emphasised work as the condition and instrument of self-improvement. The press played a decisive role in the formulation and dissemination of such values. <em>Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press: Living Work for Living People</em> (2022) precisely addresses this situation, investigating the content, form, and impact of the labour discourse in the pages of trade periodicals or under the pen of professionals. Edited by Andrew King, whose work on the Victorian period lies at the junction between literature, history, media studies, and sociology, this ten-chapter volume derives from the BLT19 project (https://www.blt19.co.uk/), a database of nineteenth-century business, labour, trade, and temperance magazines King launched in 2016. It is published as a complement to <em>The Routledge Handbook to Nineteenth-Century Periodicals and Newspapers</em> (edited by Andrew King, Alexis Easley, and John Morton, 2016) and <em>Researching the Nineteenth-Century Press: Case Studies</em> (edited by Easley, King, and Morton, 2017).</p> <p>Beyond work's centrality as a benchmark of Victorian value, it was a cultural construction formulated and widely disseminated by the press. Pervading all sections of specialised periodicals, the labour rhetoric pertained to five areas: bodily and intellectual practice, social and commercial exchange, class, Christian value, and moral imperative. As King suggests in his introduction to <em>Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press</em>, this set of values can be used as a road map to the whole volume (7). The subsequent chapters assess this discourse as it was circulated by a selection of trade and business periodicals or through the writings of several well-known <strong>[End Page 516]</strong> figures connected to the printing business. In chapter 2, Andrew Hobbs shows how provincial newspapers and periodicals quickly became \\\"an information technology, providing an infrastructure which assisted efficient trade and employment\\\" (38). Analysing the trade, professional, and work-related content of six local publications spanning the second half of the century, Hobbs sheds light on the omnipresence of business news in newspapers' columns and reveals the strong connection between publishers and local business interests. This approach is very much in keeping with the \\\"taxonomies and procedures\\\" of chapter 3, in which King suggests fresh ways of looking at the field of Victorian periodicals studies. Using the example of the BLT19 project, King calls attention to the transformational and cultural potential of classification processes in digital humanities. \\\"The question of how we map fields of inquiry and classify units of those fields,\\\" he writes, determines the ways in which we understand the world (61).</p> <p>Chapters 4 and 6 both deal with (auto)biographical constructions of the nineteenth-century professional. In \\\"The Page as Stage,\\\" Anna Maria Barry examines the way in which male opera singers used the press to advertise their skills and promote their professional interests. Flore Janssen, in chapter 6, chooses the example of Margaret Harkness (1854–1923), a nurse turned journalist and novelist, to comment on representations of nursing in Victorian periodicals. Harkness's writings, Janssen remarks, raise contradictions in the representation of nursing as work but also testify to a degree of evolution in the perception of female employment (111). Strongly enmeshed with Victorian assumptions about social, national, and ideological worth, professional identities were constantly renegotiated through the press. Both Deborah Canavan, in chapter 5, and Rachel Calder, in chapter 7, tackle this complex issue, showing how, in the context of highly volatile markets and mutable careers, workers used the printed page to establish and maintain their public status. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 工作与十九世纪报刊:安德鲁-金编著,《工作与十九世纪报刊:活生生的人的活生生的工作》,弗朗索瓦丝-贝莱(简历) 安德鲁-金编著,《工作与十九世纪报刊:New York: Routledge, 2022),第 xiii + 240 页,精装本 160.00 美元/125.00 英镑,平装本和电子书 48.99 美元/35.99 英镑。工党在维多利亚时期的公共话语中占据着重要地位。1832 年《改革法案》赋予富有的中产阶级权力后,修辞结构越来越多地将劳动与男子气概和体面联系在一起。根据基督教福音派的原则,在托马斯-卡莱尔等思想家的影响下,"Laborare est Orare.工作就是崇拜"(《过去与现在》,1843 年)和塞缪尔-斯迈尔斯(Samuel Smiles,其《自助》(1859 年)一举获得成功)等思想家的影响下,维多利亚人强调工作是自我完善的条件和工具。报刊在这种价值观的形成和传播中起到了决定性的作用。工作与十九世纪的报刊:2022 年出版的《工作与十九世纪报刊:活人的活工作》(Work and Nineteenth-Century Press: Living Work for Living People,2022 年)正是针对这种情况,研究了行业期刊或专业人士笔下的劳工论述的内容、形式和影响。本卷由安德鲁-金(Andrew King)主编,他对维多利亚时期的研究处于文学、历史、媒体研究和社会学的交界处,本卷共十章,源自 BLT19 项目(https://www.blt19.co.uk/),该项目是金于 2016 年发起的一个关于十九世纪商业、劳工、贸易和节制杂志的数据库。该书作为《十九世纪期刊和报纸路特利奇手册》(The Routledge Handbook to Nineteenth-Century Periodicals and Newspapers,由安德鲁-金、亚历克西斯-伊斯利和约翰-莫顿编辑,2016 年)和《研究十九世纪报刊》(Researching the Nineteenth-Century Press:案例研究》(Easley、King 和 Morton 编辑,2017 年)。除了工作作为维多利亚时代价值基准的核心地位外,它还是报刊制定并广泛传播的一种文化建构。在专业期刊的所有版面上,劳动修辞涉及五个方面:身体和智力实践、社会和商业交换、阶级、基督教价值和道德要求。正如金在《工作与十九世纪报刊》的导言中所说,这一系列价值观可以作为通往整本书的路线图(7)。随后的章节将对这一论述进行评估,因为它是通过精选的贸易和商业期刊或与印刷业有关的几位著名 [第516页完] 人物的著作传播的。在第 2 章中,安德鲁-霍布斯(Andrew Hobbs)展示了省级报纸和期刊如何迅速成为 "一种信息技术,提供了有助于高效贸易和就业的基础设施"(38)。通过分析本世纪下半叶六种地方出版物中与贸易、专业和工作相关的内容,霍布斯揭示了报纸专栏中无处不在的商业新闻,并揭示了出版商与地方商业利益之间的紧密联系。这种方法与第 3 章中的 "分类法和程序 "非常一致,King 在该章中提出了维多利亚时期期刊研究领域的全新视角。以 BLT19 项目为例,King 呼吁人们关注数字人文领域分类过程的变革和文化潜力。"他写道:"我们如何规划研究领域并对这些领域的单元进行分类的问题,决定了我们理解世界的方式(61)。第 4 章和第 6 章都涉及 19 世纪专业人士的(自)传记建构。在 "页面即舞台 "一章中,安娜-玛丽亚-巴里探讨了歌剧男歌手如何利用报刊宣传他们的技能和促进他们的职业兴趣。弗洛尔-扬森(Flore Janssen)在第 6 章中以玛格丽特-哈克内斯(Margaret Harkness,1854-1923 年)为例,评论了维多利亚时期期刊中对护理的描述。扬森指出,哈克内斯的著作提出了护理工作表述中的矛盾之处,但也证明了女性就业观念的某种程度的演变(111)。职业身份与维多利亚时代关于社会、国家和意识形态价值的假设紧密相连,并通过报刊不断重新谈判。德博拉-卡纳万(Deborah Canavan)在第 5 章和雷切尔-考尔德(Rachel Calder)在第 7 章中都探讨了这个复杂的问题,展示了在市场剧烈动荡、职业易变的背景下,工人如何利用印刷品来确立和维护自己的公众地位。对于...
Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press: Living Work for Living People ed. by Andrew King (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Reviewed by:
Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press: Living Work for Living People ed. by Andrew King
Françoise Baillet (bio)
Andrew King, ed., Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press: Living Work for Living People ( New York: Routledge, 2022), pp. xiii + 240, $160.00/£125.00 hardcover, $48.99/£35.99 paperback and e-book.
Labour occupied a prominent position in Victorian public discourse. After the Reform Bill of 1832 gave power to the wealthy middle classes, rhetorical constructions increasingly associated labour with manhood and respectability. In line with the principles of evangelical Christianity and under the influence of thinkers such as Thomas Carlyle—"Laborare est Orare. Work is worship" (Past and Present, 1843)—and Samuel Smiles, whose Self-Help (1859) was an instant success, Victorians emphasised work as the condition and instrument of self-improvement. The press played a decisive role in the formulation and dissemination of such values. Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press: Living Work for Living People (2022) precisely addresses this situation, investigating the content, form, and impact of the labour discourse in the pages of trade periodicals or under the pen of professionals. Edited by Andrew King, whose work on the Victorian period lies at the junction between literature, history, media studies, and sociology, this ten-chapter volume derives from the BLT19 project (https://www.blt19.co.uk/), a database of nineteenth-century business, labour, trade, and temperance magazines King launched in 2016. It is published as a complement to The Routledge Handbook to Nineteenth-Century Periodicals and Newspapers (edited by Andrew King, Alexis Easley, and John Morton, 2016) and Researching the Nineteenth-Century Press: Case Studies (edited by Easley, King, and Morton, 2017).
Beyond work's centrality as a benchmark of Victorian value, it was a cultural construction formulated and widely disseminated by the press. Pervading all sections of specialised periodicals, the labour rhetoric pertained to five areas: bodily and intellectual practice, social and commercial exchange, class, Christian value, and moral imperative. As King suggests in his introduction to Work and the Nineteenth-Century Press, this set of values can be used as a road map to the whole volume (7). The subsequent chapters assess this discourse as it was circulated by a selection of trade and business periodicals or through the writings of several well-known [End Page 516] figures connected to the printing business. In chapter 2, Andrew Hobbs shows how provincial newspapers and periodicals quickly became "an information technology, providing an infrastructure which assisted efficient trade and employment" (38). Analysing the trade, professional, and work-related content of six local publications spanning the second half of the century, Hobbs sheds light on the omnipresence of business news in newspapers' columns and reveals the strong connection between publishers and local business interests. This approach is very much in keeping with the "taxonomies and procedures" of chapter 3, in which King suggests fresh ways of looking at the field of Victorian periodicals studies. Using the example of the BLT19 project, King calls attention to the transformational and cultural potential of classification processes in digital humanities. "The question of how we map fields of inquiry and classify units of those fields," he writes, determines the ways in which we understand the world (61).
Chapters 4 and 6 both deal with (auto)biographical constructions of the nineteenth-century professional. In "The Page as Stage," Anna Maria Barry examines the way in which male opera singers used the press to advertise their skills and promote their professional interests. Flore Janssen, in chapter 6, chooses the example of Margaret Harkness (1854–1923), a nurse turned journalist and novelist, to comment on representations of nursing in Victorian periodicals. Harkness's writings, Janssen remarks, raise contradictions in the representation of nursing as work but also testify to a degree of evolution in the perception of female employment (111). Strongly enmeshed with Victorian assumptions about social, national, and ideological worth, professional identities were constantly renegotiated through the press. Both Deborah Canavan, in chapter 5, and Rachel Calder, in chapter 7, tackle this complex issue, showing how, in the context of highly volatile markets and mutable careers, workers used the printed page to establish and maintain their public status. For the...