More eBay treasure ... I bought this scrapbook because its newspaper cuttings were provided by an agency (you pay them to gather cuttings on particular topics, people, organisations) and I'm interested in the history of newspaper cuttings agencies. 1/6
But really it's of interest to #middlebrow scholars, as it seems to have been the property of early Mills & Boon novelist Louise Gerard (1878-1970) , and has cuttings from her first success in 1910 to the 1920s. 2/6
Apparently all the plots were similar, set in exotic locations, which she researched in person, and often featured the heroine falling in love with her (white) rapist. Plenty of racism too -- here's the cover of one. These images are deep in our culture in Britain. 3/6
There's a few items between the pages, including this pic of 3 white women with an Egyptian(?) man and his camel. It's from Dora -- wonder if she was the friend to whom Gerard dedicated most of her books? 4/6
There's also this envelope. Her family were soap manufacturers. 5/6
Inside is a pretty bad manuscript poem about a railway in Ghana (then the British colony of Gold Coast).
There's a couple of other photos and a Mills & Boon booklet with an extract from someone else's novel.
Er, that's it. 6/6
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NAM Rodger says in @LRB that there are “scarcely more than a score” of memoirs by ordinary sailors, in a review of Stephen Taylor’s “Sons of the Waves”, covering 1740-1840. Hmm, I thought.
He’s talking about autobiography published in book form ... but in 19C most historical writing, inc memoir, was not to be found in books, but in magazines and newspapers, as @lesliehowsam has established.
I haven’t read the book, nor those of Prof Rodger & don’t know anything about #maritimehistory or #navalhistory. But 30 mins searching in @BNArchive, which contains less than 10% of British/Irish newspapers, found a dozen memoirs, not in Stephen Taylor's book.
@HerHandsMyHands Same thread, now with alt text, which I should have added originally. I bought this scrapbook on eBay because I'm interested in the history of newspaper cuttings agencies (you pay them to gather cuttings on particular topics, people, organisations). 1/6
But really it's of interest to #middlebrow scholars, as it seems to have been the property of early Mills & Boon novelist Louise Gerard (1878-1970) , and has cuttings from her first success in 1910 to the 1920s. 2/6
Apparently all the plots were similar, set in exotic locations, which she researched in person, and often featured the heroine falling in love with her (white) rapist. Plenty of racism too -- here's the cover of one. These images are deep in our culture in Britain. 3/6
45 minutes before the first event of the @RS4VP digital salon, a conversation between Prof Brian Maidment and @thomassmits, winner of this year's Colby Prize for best book on Victorian newspapers and periodicals. Get the Zoom link by registering here: eventbrite.co.uk/e/research-soc…
Thomas's book is <The European Illustrated Press and the Emergence of a Transnational Visual Culture of the News, 1842-1870> is routledge.com/The-European-I…
The judges said that this study of ‘visual news culture across European, UK, and Australian newspapers is an outstanding book that both points the way forward for more research, and ...
Another new book repeats the nonsense that the Daily Telegraph was the first penny daily in the UK, and that the Press Association was launched in 1868.
The Telegraph was launched in June 1855, but only halved its price to a penny on 17 Sept 1855. Here’s the last issue at 2d.
Many other dailies had been selling for a penny since June 1855, including an older established (by a few days) Daily Telegraph in Sheffield, the Daily Post in Liverpool (pic below) and the Manchester Examiner.
"Politics and the Press in Inter-war Britain", seminar led by James Brennan of @NewmanHistory at
University of Central Lancashire (Preston), Livesey House LH326, tomorrow (Wed 5 Feb), 4.30-5.30pm, all welcome
@NewmanHistory Details:
In this period of mass democracy political appeals needed to include millions of newly enfranchised voters, both male and female. It is usually believed that these years witnessed the rising influence of the press barons and national papers while the provincial declined
... Recent scholarship however questions the extent to which the national press lived up to its name in this period, and emphasises that provincial newspapers remained an important part of local political cultures ...
2 years after the @WMNNews launch, in 1862, Saunders and co-owner Edward Spender opened a London office, to process non-local news and features faster. A year later, they offered the service to other provincial morning papers, via their Central Press news agency ...
The Central Press soon became the biggest UK news agency, but many journalists didn't like the idea of the same content appearing in many papers simultaneously -- that was OK for scratty weeklies, but not for more prestigious morning papers ...