Book of Ages

Book of Ages
Author: Jill Lepore
Publisher: Knopf
Total Pages: 465
Release: 2013
Genre: Biography
ISBN: 0307958345

A revelatory portrait of Benjamin Franklin's youngest sister and a wholly different account of the founding of the United States.

The Whore's Story

The Whore's Story
Author: Bradford K. Mudge
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 298
Release: 2000-06-08
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0198030878

This fresh and persuasively argued book examines the origins of pornography in Britain and presents a comprehensive overview of women's role in the evolution of obscene fiction. Carefully monitoring the complex interconnections between three related debates--that over the masquerade, that over the novel, and that over prostitution--Mudge contextualizes the growing literary need to separate good fiction from bad and argues that that process was of crucial importance to the emergence of a new, middle-class state. Looking closely at sermons, medical manuals, periodical essays, and political tracts as well as poetry, novels, and literary criticism, The Whore's Story tracks the shifting politics of pleasure in eighteenth-century Britain and charts the rise of modern, pornographic sensibilities.

Libraries in Literature

Libraries in Literature
Author: Alice Crawford
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 305
Release: 2022-09-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0192668269

Unashamedly a book for the bookish, yet accessible and frequently entertaining, this is the first book devoted to how libraries are depicted in imaginative writing. Covering fiction, poetry, and drama from the late Middle Ages to the present, it runs the gamut of British and American literature, as well as examining a range of fiction in other languages—from Rabelais and Cervantes to modern and contemporary French, Italian, Japanese, and Russian writing. While the tropes of the complex catalogue and the bibliomaniacal reader persist throughout the centuries, libraries also emerge as societal battle-sites where issues of personality, gender, cultural power, and national identity are contested repeatedly and often in surprising ways. As well as examining how libraries were deployed in their work by canonical authors from Cervantes, Shakespeare, and Swift to Jane Austen, George Eliot, and Jorge Luis Borges, the volume also examines in detail the haunted libraries of Margaret Oliphant and M. R. James, and a range of much less familiar historic and contemporary authors. Alert to the depiction of librarians as well as of book-rooms and institutional readers, this book will inform, entertain, and delight. At a time when traditional libraries are under pressure, Libraries in Literature shows the power of their lasting fascination.

Bookish Histories

Bookish Histories
Author: I. Ferris
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2009-11-19
Genre: History
ISBN: 0230244807

This ground-breaking collection of essays presents a new 'bookish' literary history, which situates questions about books at the intersection of a range of debates about the role of authors and readers, the organization of knowledge, the vogue for collecting, and the impact of overlapping technologies of writing and shifting generic boundaries.