History, asked by nitesh9884, 1 year ago

write a detailed note on provincial literature.

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Answered by aarush1360
3
Provincial Literature
Aesthetics and the Transatlantic Book Trade, 1800-1850

Joseph Rezek

296 pages | 6 x 9 | 11 illus. 
Cloth 2015 | ISBN 9780812247343 | $59.95s | Outside the Americas £48.00 
Ebook editions are available from selected online vendors 
A volume in the series Material Texts 
View table of contents and excerpt

"Joseph Rezek's . . . capacity to animate his research and his willingness to let it demonstrate complex, sometimes contradictory movements in literary history are entirely admirable features of this impressive first book."—Times Literary Supplement

"[A]mbitious and beautifully written . . . Rezek's evocative and wide-ranging analysis is a welcome exploration of the Anglophone literary world in the early nineteenth century."—Nineteenth-Century Contexts

"This excellent book is a must-read for scholars of the history of the book in the nineteenth century, especially for those interested in the Atlantic World."—Literature & History

"This work defies the nationalist parameters that organize the study of nearly all literature, whether British, American, postcolonial, or comparative. Scholars simply do not tend to think in these terms. London and the Making of Provincial Literature accordingly shines a bright light onto one of our critically blindest spots."—Jordan Alexander Stein, in Common-place

"Joseph Rezek's London and the Making of Provincial Literature is a landmark achievement in Atlantic literary studies . . . . Rezek's book deserves the widest possible audience, and should serve as reference point for all scholars of Irish, Scottish, and American literature who are interested in the Atlantic world or the history of the book."—The Wordsworth Circle

"An important and excellent book, of equal interest to specialist readers and to those unfamiliar with the story of how Scottish, Irish, and American literature arose in the shadow of London's literary power. Indebted to Bourdieu but working with a new method of his own, Rezek shows how it is still possible, in an oft visited landscape, to make extraordinary discoveries."—Pascale Casanova, author of The World Republic of Letters

"London and the Making of Provincial Literature makes a powerful case at two levels—joining book history to novel and literary production in so compelling a way and rewriting our understanding of the transatlantic anglophone literary exchange in eye-opening terms that will be of importance to future work in the history of the novel—while giving us a superb rethinking of the dynamics of Romantic-age fiction in the bargain."—

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