安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- Historic Childrens Voices: Additional Reading
Fabian, Ann “Amateur Authorship” A History of the Book in America, v 3: The Industrial Book 1840-1880 Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2007, pp 412-415 Based partly on research done at AAS Handwritten Newspapers: An Alternative Medium issue of Finnish Lit Soc , v 26 (2019) Isaac, Jessica
- Genius Trouble on JSTOR
Fabian, Ann 2007 “Amateur Authorship” In The Industrial Book, 1840–1880 A History of the Book in America, volume 3, edited by Scott E Casper et al , 407–15 Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press
- Project MUSE - A History of the Book in America
Volume 3 of A History of the Book in America narrates the emergence of a national book trade in the nineteenth century, as changes in manufacturing, distribution, and publishing conditioned, and were conditioned by, the evolving practices of authors and readers
- Postbellum Teenage Subculture and the Amateur Press - Gale
In the twentieth century, amateur journalism grew to include adults as well as adolescents, but in its early decades it constituted a uniquely teenage print subculture—arguably, the first in existence
- Graphing the Archives of Nineteenth-Century Amateur Newspapers
See my discussion of the evolution of the term “amateur,” as well as Ronald and Mary Zboray’s and Ann Fabian’s analysis of mid-to-late century cultures of amateur authorship
- (PDF) Genius Trouble - Academia. edu
What seems to be missing is a theory of authorship that takes into account the fact that authors themselves have had to reckon with authorship as a construction, particularly the ideological emphasis on genius as it was commercialized during the “industrial era” of print publication
- Modding: Amateur Authorship and How the Video - ProQuest
Explore millions of resources from scholarly journals, books, newspapers, videos and more, on the ProQuest Platform
- The Legacy of the Vanity Press and Digital Transitions
Moreover as Ann Fabian has noted, amateur authors have long contended with the tendency of professionalizing authors to shore up their status through the systematic devaluation of amateur work
|
|
|