Graphic Design, Print Culture, and the Eighteenth-Century Novel

Sprednja platnica
Cambridge University Press, 27. nov. 2008 - 316 strani
The uniformity of graphic design in contemporary paperback and critical editions of the eighteenth-century novel no longer conveys the visual appeal of early editions. Janine Barchas explains how the novel's material embodiment as printed book rivalled its narrative content in diversity and creativity in the first half of the eighteenth century. Prose writers such as Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, and Henry and Sarah Fielding experimented with the novel's physical appearance from the beginning of its emergence in Britain.

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O avtorju (2008)

Janine Barchas is Assistant Professor in the Department of English at University of Texas at Austin. She is the editor of The Annotations in Lady Bradshaigh's Copy of Clarissa (1998), and has contributed to Essays on Eighteenth-Century Genre and Culture (2001).

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