Preface Introduction: The Cultural Trope of Sensationalism The Case of Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Belgravia: Research Methodology for an Intertextual Reading of the Periodical Press Abstract Order and Fleeting Sensations: The Aesthetics of Fragmentation in Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Belgravia The Redefinition of the Public Sphere in the Nineteenth-Century Periodical Press: Mary Elizabeth Braddon and the Debate on Anonymity The Cultural Trope of Sensationalism: Advertising, Industrial Journalism, and Global Trade in Belgravia Sensationalism and the Early History of Film: From Magic Lanterns to the Silent Film Serial Drama of Louis Feuillade Mary Elizabeth Braddon in Paris: Sensational Periodical Literature across the Channel in the 1870-80s
ALBERTO GABRIELE studied Philology and Literary Criticism
at the University of Florence, Italy, where he was awarded a laurea
with honors. A recipient of a Fulbright fellowship, he holds an
M.A. and a Ph.D. from New York University's Comparative Literature
Department. His research interests are the history of the novel,
the relation between the written text and visual culture, and the
history of film.
"Reading Popular Culture in Victorian Print is a wide-ranging exploration of the 'trope of sensationalism' in the Victorian periodical press . . . the range of fascinating subjects covered makes it of use and interest to an equally diverse range of researchers. Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Belgravia is focussed also as a case study for considering the ways in which we can approach periodical research."-Victorian Periodicals Review "Reading Popular Culture in Victorian Print is a wide-ranging exploration of the 'trope of sensationalism' in the Victorian periodical press, ... the range of fascinating subjects covered makes it of use and interest to an equally diverse range of researchers. Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Belgravia is focussed also as a case study for considering the ways in which we can approach periodical research." - Helena Ifill, Newcastle University 'Reading Popular Culture in Victorian Print uncovers clues to Victorian reading practices that anticipate our engagement with digital hypertextuality. By placing Belgravia in the context of an emergent modernity, Gabriele also illuminates a critical episode in Victorian history and shows how periodicals helped shape Victorian culture.' Mary Poovey, New York University and author of Genres of the Credit Economy'Reading Popular Culture in Victorian Print is a well-researched, engaging contribution to our understanding of nineteenth-century popular culture. Gabriele is an impressive young scholar equallyat home in the archive and navigating throughpresent-day debates on modernity and sensation. His detailed look at the important Victorian periodical Belgravia fills a significant gap in magazine scholarship, but this book should interest a non-specialized audience interested in cultural globalization, cross-media synergies and the birth of a mass-produced sensational popular culture.' Will Straw, Professor, Department of Art History and Communications Studies, McGill University "Gabriele's book is not only a helpful monograph about the monthly Belgravia under the direction of Mary Elizabeth Brandon (1866-1876), it is also and maybe above all a relevant reflection upon the cultural and social power of the periodical press. It shows clearly how the tropes of 'sensationalism' contributed to shaping the new visual, urban and industrial culture the very frame of our modernity." - Dominique Kafila, Professor, University of Paris-Sorbonne and author of L'Encre et le sang
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