Zum Hauptinhalt springen
Nicht aus der Schweiz? Besuchen Sie lehmanns.de
The Edinburgh Companion to British Colonial Periodicals -

The Edinburgh Companion to British Colonial Periodicals

Buch | Hardcover
580 Seiten
2024
Edinburgh University Press (Verlag)
978-1-3995-0063-0 (ISBN)
CHF 269,95 inkl. MwSt
The first major overview of British colonial periodicals from the rise of the Empire to decolonisation
This Companion showcases the latest research into British colonial periodicals by leading scholars in the field. The first ever large-scale attempt to gather into one volume research on British colonial periodicals, the chapters in this volume analyse the fundamental role played by colonial periodicals in sustaining as well as contesting the economic, political and cultural hegemony of the British Empire from its inception to its fall. The volume considers both periodicals published in Britain for colonial consumption and those published in British colonies and dominions.

David Finkelstein is a cultural historian who has published in areas related to print, labour and press history. Recent publications include Movable Types: Roving Creative Printers of the Victorian World (2018), and the edited Edinburgh History of the British and Irish Press, volume 2: Expansion and Evolution, 1800–1900 (2020), winner of the 2021 Robert and Vineta Colby Scholarly Book Prize for its contribution to the promotion of Victorian press studies. David Johnson is Professor of Literature in the Department of English and Creative Writing at The Open University. He is the author of Shakespeare and South Africa (1996), Imagining the Cape Colony: History, Literature and the South African Nation (2012) and Dreaming of Freedom in South Africa: Literature between Critique and Utopia (2019); and the co-editor of A Historical Companion to Postcolonial Literatures in English (2008); The Book in Africa: Critical Debates (2015); and Labour Struggles in Southern Africa (2023). He is the General Editor of the Edinburgh University Press series Key Texts in Anti-Colonial Thought. Caroline Davis is Associate Professor in Publishing in the Department of Information Studies at University College London. Caroline is the author of Creating Postcolonial Literature: African Writers and British Publishers (2013) and African Literature and the CIA (2020); the editor of Print Cultures: A Reader in Theory and Practice (2019); and the co-editor of The Book in Africa: Critical Debates (2015).

Introduction: British colonial periodicals in context, David Finkelstein and David Johnson



Section A: Creating and contesting the colonial public sphere

1. Authorship and collective self-fashioning in Pre-Confederation English Canada, Cynthia Sugars and Paul Keen



2. Early colonial periodicals in nineteenth-century Canada: The Literary Garland in context, Fariha Shaikh

3. The Afro-Caribbean press and the politics of place in Jamaica and Barbados: The Watchman and Jamaica Free Press and The Liberal, Candace Ward



4. Mofussil versus metropolis, subalterns versus seniors: the rise and demise of The Meerut Universal Magazine, Graham Shaw



5. Writing the ‘Wooden World’: periodicals and settler environmental knowledge in colonial New Zealand, Philip Steer



6. British missionary magazines at home and abroad: Southern Africa as topic and Southern Africans as readership, Lize Kriel, Annika Vosseler and Chantelle Finaughty



7. The Sydney Bulletin and the settler colonial subject, Tony Hughes-d’Aeth



8. Periodicals and Australian Federation, Sam Hutchinson



9. The South African News and the Anglo-Boer War of 1899–1902, Jonathan Derrick



10. The West Africa Weekly: commerce, empire and decolonisation, Jonathan Derrick



Section B: Women and colonial periodicals

11. Transnational reprinting and the colonial women’s magazine: The Montreal Museum, 1832–34, Honor Rieley



12. The birth of the Australian women’s magazine: The New Idea, 1902–1911, Michelle J. Smith



13. Women’s writing and reporting on women in the Ghanaian and Nigerian Press, ca. 1880–1930s, Katharina Oke



14. Indian women’s pre-independence periodicals in English: The Indian Ladies’ Magazine, Stri-Dharma, and the Indian New Woman, Deborah A. Logan



15. Marriage Hygiene and the internationalisation of eugenical sexology in the 1930s, Tanya Agathocleous, Ruwanthi Edirisinghe, Jessica Lu, Jaïra Placide and Sarah Schwartz



Section C: Language in colonial periodicals

16. Making Māori citizens in colonial New Zealand: the role of government niupepa, Lachy Paterson



17. Language and the making of the colonial modern: periodicals from late nineteenth-century Kerala, India, G. Arunima



18. Simple Letters?: British and Pacific literacies in the Victorian missionary periodical, Michelle Elleray



19. Interrogating the imperial factor and convoking black South Africa: the Cape African Newspaper Izwi Labantu, 1897–1909, Janet Remmington



20. Colonial government periodicals in 1920s East Africa: Mambo Leo and Habari, Emma Hunter



21. Print networks and linguistic interaction in the early Yoruba press, Karin Barber



22. Colonial entanglements: Black South African periodicals and the colonial printsphere, 1920s–30s, Corinne Sandwith and Athambile Masola



Section D: Trans-colonial connections in colonial periodicals

23. Melodee Wood, Samuel Revans and Company: colonial commercial trade newspapers in the age of Responsible Government



24. Colonial trade identity and labour information exchange in the international typographical trade press, 1840–1910, David Finkelstein

25. The Anglo-Zulu War in the Friend of India: mediation, meaning and authority, Andrew Griffiths



26. British anarchism and the colonial question: the case of Freedom, 1918–1962, Ole Birk Laursen



27. The Atlantic Charter in British colonial periodicals, David Johnson



28. Citation and solidarity: reporting the 1955 Asian-African Conference in African newspapers and periodicals, Christopher J. Lee



29. Non-alignment and Maoist China: Eastern Horizon in the era of decolonisation, 1960–1981, Alex Tickell and Anne Wetherilt



Section E: Anti-colonialism in the colonial and postcolonial public sphere

30. For illustrative purposes: Nana Sahib, Jotee Prasad, and representation in British and Anglo-Indian newspapers, Priti Joshi



31. The Indian Newspaper Reports of British India: ‘A Kind of Periodical Press’, Sukeshi Kamra



32. The anticolonial periodical between public and counterpublic: Beacon and Public Opinion in the interwar years, Raphael Dalleo



33. ‘Not a Newspaper in the Ordinary Sense of the Term:’ the geopolitics of the newspaper/magazine divide in the Nigerian Comet, Marina Bilbija



34. Africa in Jamaica: W. A. Domingo, George Padmore, and Public Opinion, Myles Osborne



35. Citizenship, responsibility and literary culture in the university periodical in Eastern Africa: spaces of social production in Busara and its networks, Madhu Krishnan

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Edinburgh Companions to Literature and the Humanities
Zusatzinfo 56 black and white illustrations, 5 colour illustrations, 3 black and white tables
Verlagsort Edinburgh
Sprache englisch
Maße 170 x 244 mm
Themenwelt Schulbuch / Wörterbuch Lexikon / Chroniken
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Regional- / Ländergeschichte
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Anglistik / Amerikanistik
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft
Sozialwissenschaften Kommunikation / Medien Buchhandel / Bibliothekswesen
ISBN-10 1-3995-0063-5 / 1399500635
ISBN-13 978-1-3995-0063-0 / 9781399500630
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt?
Mehr entdecken
aus dem Bereich
Europa 1914 bis 1949

von Ian Kershaw

Buch | Softcover (2025)
Pantheon (Verlag)
CHF 32,15
Träume und Macht : eine Biografie

von Marita Krauss

Buch | Hardcover (2025)
C.H.Beck (Verlag)
CHF 61,60