
Reviews
The Novel and the Blank is remarkable in its breadth and is rich with insights on the literary history of the book trades in eighteenth century British America. Benjamin Franklin, African Americans, and evangelicals serve as witnesses from a past moment. Brilliantly original, Brown shows us not only what British Americans read but also why and how it matters.
Deeply learned and delightfully witty and playful, The Novel and the Blank is literary history that is at once extremely literary, resolutely material, and deeply historical. In other words, very satisfying on any number of registers.
Leaving aside tired debates about the public sphere, Matthew Brown proposes the wonderful new framework of 'publication culture' to understand colonial American printing and writing in what he calls, exuberantly, the short eighteenth century. With a vast archive, a sharp wit, and brilliant close readings of countless printed objects, The Novel and the Blank confirms that Brown has a literary sensibility unmatched among book historians.
With The Novel and the Blank, Matthew P. Brown builds on foundational work by Hall and Amory to elevate the study of early American print culture. Brown helpfully illuminates the evangelical roots of the revolutionary public sphere in this richly textured history spanning from Benjamin Franklin to popular fiction.
Book Details
Acknowledgements
Preface: The Short Eighteenth Century
Introduction: Publication Culture and Literary Value
1. Franklin's Beat
2. Publishing Evangelicalism
3. Bell's Liberties
4. Known Unknowns
5. British
Acknowledgements
Preface: The Short Eighteenth Century
Introduction: Publication Culture and Literary Value
1. Franklin's Beat
2. Publishing Evangelicalism
3. Bell's Liberties
4. Known Unknowns
5. British American Judas
Notes
Index