List of Illustrations Introduction: The Foreign Political Press in Nineteenth-Century London: Local and Transnational Contexts, Constance Bantman (University of Surrey, UK) Chapter 1: Newsprint Nations: Spanish American Publishing in London, 1808-1827, Karen Racine (University of Guelph, Canada) Chapter 2: Cultural Identity and Political Dissidence in the Spanish Periodicals in London, Daniel Munoz-Sempere (King's College London, UK) Chapter 3: Hipólito da Costa, o Correio Braziliense and the Dissemination of the Enlightenment in Brazil, Isabel Lustosa (Casa de Rui Barbosa, Rio de Janiero) and Ana Cláudia Suriani da Silva (University College London, UK) Chapter 4: The Press as a Reflection of the Divisions among the Portuguese Political Exiles (1808-1832), Daniel Alves (Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal) and Paulo Jorge Fernandes (Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal) Chapter 5: From Republicanism to Anarchism: 50 Years of French Exilic Newspaper Publishing, Thomas C. Jones, University of Buckingham, UK) and Constance Bantman (University of Surrey, UK) Chapter 6: The Italian Anarchist Press in London: A Lens for Investigating a Transnational Movement, Pietro Di Paola (University of Lincoln, UK) Chapter 7: Political Contestation and Internal Strife: Socialist and Anarchist German Newspapers in London, 1878–1910, Daniel Laqua (Northumbria University, UK) Chapter 8: News of the Struggle: the Russian Political Press in London 1853-1921, Charlotte Alston (Northumbria University, UK) Chapter 9 : The Indian Nationalist Press in London, 1865-1914, Ole Birk Laursen (Goldsmiths, University of London, UK) Appendix: Biographies of Journalists Bibliography
A transnational examination of the foreign political press in London during the long 19th century (1815-1914).
Constance Bantman is Senior Lecturer in French at the University of Surrey, UK. She is the author of The French Anarchists in London 1880-1914 (2013) and the co-editor, along with Bert Altena, of Reassessing the Transnational Turn: Scales of Analysis in Anarchist and Syndicalist Studies (2015). Ana Cláudia Suriani da Silva is Senior Lecturer in Brazilian Studies at University College London, UK. She is the author of Machado de Assis’s Philosopher or Dog? From Serial to Book Form (2010), the co-editor, along with Sandra Guardini Vasconcelos, of Books and Periodicals in Brazil 1768-1930 (2014) and the co-editor, along with Marcia Abreu, of The Cultural Revolution of the Nineteenth Century: Theatre, the Book-Trade and Reading in the Transatlantic World (2016).
[A] must-read for anybody with a taste for the Victorian press,
Victorian politics, cosmopolitanism, and immigration in late
nineteenth-century London. It resolutely convinces readers that the
foreign political press is a fully fledged part of the British
press.
*History: Reviews of New Books*
[The] potential benefits of this work for any number of audiences
are myriad. Its chapters can easily be incorporated into numerous
college courses on journalism, anticolonial or revolutionary
studies, or the history of nineteenth-century radicalism, to name a
few … Bantman’s and da Silva’s volume will likely, and certainly
should, stand as a model contribution for the discipline.
*JHistory*
[A] fascinating book ... Ultimately, the reader is impressed with
the volume’s overall sense of topicality, not only, as Bantman
suggests, concerning London and multiculturalism, nor with the
wider concept of transnational print culture, but with a more
radical questioning of the role and responsibility of the press in
the development of extremist international politics.
*Journal of European Periodical Studies*
Provides a wide and viable foundation for future research, thereby
fulfilling its stated goals by delivering a valuable collection of
studies.
*Anarchist Studies*
This is an important contribution to print history as well as
transnational and migration studies. Its perceptive and revelatory
essays break new ground, opening up areas of press activity
hitherto downplayed, ignored or unknown. While authoritative, the
volume will no doubt inspire a great deal more work in this area.
This is a significant book that deserves to be widely read.
*Andrew King, Professor of English Literature and Literary Studies,
University of Greenwich, UK*
This is an invaluable, scholarly, and original book. By exploring
the work of many European, Russian, and Indian activists and
journalists who were based in London and published newspapers there
during the long 19th century, the contributors cast light on the
politics of exile and empire, the shifting meanings of liberalism
and protest, the uses of print and language, and the transmission
of information across national and continental boundaries.
*Linda Colley, Shelby M.C.Davis 1958 Professor of History,
Princeton University, USA*
A highly significant contribution to the field of Victorian
periodical studies. Through case-studies, the contributors present
a thorough analysis of the print cultures of many foreign national
groups in 19th-century London. This is the first endeavour to
consider the foreign political press in Britain globally, and it is
set to encourage fruitful discussions and enrich the historiography
of the transnational press.
*Stéphanie Prévost, Senior Lecturer in 19th-Century British
History, Paris Diderot University, France*
A solid collection that provides the reader with a detailed
geography of the Victorian London publishing world and sheds some
light on aspects hitherto neglected.
*European Review of History*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |