New Grub Street

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Broadview Press, Sep 14, 2007 - Fiction - 559 pages

New Grub Street is the only one of George Gissing’s two dozen novels never to have gone out of print, and has long been recognized as the most important novel of the nineteenth century on the subject of the writing professions. Indeed, no novel in the English tradition even remotely approximates the thoroughness, sophistication, and clear-sightedness with which New Grub Street explores the social and economic contexts in which writing, publishing, and reading take place. The critical introduction to this edition gives an account of Gissing’s life and times and an overview of the most important stylistic and thematic features of New Grub Street; special attention is given to the writing and publishing professions in late-Victorian England, emphasizing the range of social and economic positions that writers occupied during the period.

This Broadview edition also includes a rich selection of historical material on the literary world of London through the centuries, authorship as a profession, and Gissing’s life and work.

 

Contents

Introduction
10
A Note on Victorian Publishing
40
A Note on Incomes
43
A Brief Chronology
45
A Note on the Text
50
NEW GRUB STREET
51
Gissing on Writing
496
Grub Street Old and New
505
The Profession of Authorship
530
Early Reviews
551
4Anonymous Spectator 66
555
Selected Bibliography and Recommended Reading
557
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Stephen Arata is Associate Professor of English at the University of Virginia. He is the editor of the Broadview edition of William Morris’s News from Nowhere (2002).

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