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The Invention of the Oral: Print Commerce and Fugitive Voices in Eighteenth-Century Britain
Professor Paula McDowell
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Description for The Invention of the Oral: Print Commerce and Fugitive Voices in Eighteenth-Century Britain
Hardcover. Num Pages: 368 pages, 25 halftones. BIC Classification: 1DBK; 3JF; DSBD; KNTP. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational. Dimension: 228 x 152. .
Just as today's embrace of the digital has sparked interest in the history of print culture, the rise of commercial print culture in eighteenth-century Britain inspired reflection at the time on the traditions that had seemingly preceded it. And so it was, as Paula McDowell shows in this book, that what we know as oral culture was identified and soon celebrated during the very period of the British book trade's ascendancy. McDowell recreates a world in which everyone from clergymen to fishwives, philosophers to street hucksters, competed for space and audiences in taverns, marketplaces, and the street. Their encounters forged ... Read morenew conceptions of the oral, as McDowell demonstrates through an impressive array of sources, including travel narratives, elocution manuals, theological writings, ballad collections, and legal records. Challenging traditional models of oral versus literate societies and key assumptions about culture's ties to the spoken and the written word, this landmark study reorients critical conversations across eighteenth-century studies, media and communications studies, the history of the book, and beyond. Show Less
Product Details
Publisher
University Of Chicago Press
Place of Publication
, United States
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Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
About Professor Paula McDowell
Paula McDowell is associate professor of English at New York University. She is the author of The Women of Grub Street: Press, Politics, and Gender in the London Literary Marketplace 1678 1730 and Elinor James: Printed Writings.
Reviews for The Invention of the Oral: Print Commerce and Fugitive Voices in Eighteenth-Century Britain
By focusing on how the idea of the oral was the product of a major media shift
not unlike the one we find ourselves in the midst of now with print and the digital
McDowell has given us a new critical framework with which to understand the eighteenth-century invention of the idea of modernity itself.
Helen Deutsch, author of Loving Dr. Johnson ... Read more McDowell's smart insistence that the voice and its gestural embodiments be placed in contrast to the long triumphant march of letters gives us pause to consider where we are now. For, as McDowell intimates, if we are to understand the move from the medium of print to the textualizations of the electronic age, we would do well to examine an earlier era in which the affordances of new technologies
both print and orality
were examined with care.
Peter de Bolla, author of The Architecture of Concepts: The Historical Formation of Human Rights In this rigorously researched and boldly conceived study, McDowell pursues the origins of the idea of 'oral culture' from canonical figures such as Swift, Defoe, and Johnson to ballad collectors, elocutionists, and Billingsgate fishwives. Everyone interested in the history of mediation in the eighteenth century will want to read this book.
Tom Mole, author of Byron's Romantic Celebrity: Industrial Culture and the Hermeneutic of Intimacy McDowell draws attention to the extent to which the democratization offered by print created unease. In an original fashion, she focuses on changing attitudes to oral opinion and transmission. Doing so enables her to discuss both the period as a whole and also the conceptual, methodological, and historiographical issues involved in the dialogues between oral and literate societies. This then is an important contribution to cultural studies. It is also a finely tuned one, able to discern important nuances...an invigorating book.
H-Net Reviews Makes an important contribution. . .The close readings are acute, the prose is clear, and the larger case is convincing. This major work will be of interest to all readers of 18th-century literature and absolutely required reading for those interested in orality. Essential.
Choice Won
John Ben Snow Prize Won
CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title of 2018 This is an ambitious book which sets out to trace the development of a concept of 'oral culture' specifically as a response to the increased production of print during the eighteenth century....Ballad scholars stand to learn a lot from McDowell's book, especially if they read it in its entirety.
Folk Music Journal A highly original and important account of eighteenth-century culture and its contribution to media history, McDowell's book will quickly become essential reading for scholars....The Invention of the Oral changes the ways we see the development, circulation, and consumption of media in the eighteenth century. Importantly, it also helps us to think critically about the ongoing cultural construction of digital culture and arguments that yoke literature and print, turning literary studies into an anachronism and forgetting the ways in which literature has always transformed and been transformed by new media.
Modern Philology The difficulty here, of course, is that our knowledge of oral practices is necessarily mediated by written and printed sources and by visual and material clues that are themselves subject to all the vagaries of preservation as well as to generic constraints and exclusions, biases, and lacunae, which complicate and hinder our access to the past....Paula McDowell makes [this difficulty] a springboard for her scholarship....The strengths of The Invention of the Oral are that it brilliantly reproduces eighteenth-century writers' 'both-and' thinking
their habit of seeing and productively deploying multiple sides of an issue rather than plumping for one side of an 'either-or;' that it fully demonstrates the interest and value of paying closer attention to contemporaries' comments on orality and print; and that this leads us to question and critically reexamine our modern scholarly terms and taxonomies.
Journal of Modern History Fascinating . . . . Any scholar studying in literacy and orality in the eighteenth century will have to consult this significant new volume from one of our leading practitioners.
Journal of Folklore Research The most valuable work in The Invention of the Oral establishes how ideological retrofitting created the category of something we now call the oral tradition. . .demonstrates with multiple enlightening evidences the complex eddies between print, orality, and manuscript culture. . .persuasive and erudite.
Times Literary Supplement TheInvention of the Oral is distinctly original, challenging long-accepted claims, further refining recent refinements, and burrowing into new, relevant, and sometimes oddly overlooked categories. McDowell is a superb archivist and a skilled interpreter of both detail and trend.
Cynthia Wall, author of The Prose of Things: Transformations of Description in the Eighteenth Century Show Less