Knowing Books
Knowing Books: The Consciousness of Mediation in Eighteenth-Century Britain
CHRISTINA LUPTON
Series: Material Texts
Copyright Date: 2012
Published by: University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages: 200
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt3fj5nx
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Book Info
Knowing Books
Book Description:

The eighteenth century has long been associated with realism and objective description, modes of representation that deemphasize writing. But in the middle decades of the century, Christina Lupton observes, authors described with surprising candor the material and economic facets of their own texts' production. In Knowing Books Lupton examines a variety of eighteenth-century sources, including sermons, graffiti, philosophical texts, and magazines, which illustrate the range and character of mid-century experiments with words announcing their status as physical objects. Books that "know" their own presence on the page and in the reader's hand become, in Lupton's account, tantalizing objects whose entertainment value competes with that of realist narrative. Knowing Books introduces these mid-eighteenth-century works as part of a long history of self-conscious texts being greeted as fashionable objects. Poststructuralist and Marxist approaches to literature celebrate the consciousness of writing and economic production as belonging to revolutionary understandings of the world, but authors of the period under Lupton's gaze expose the facts of mediation without being revolutionary. On the contrary, their explication of economic and material processes shores up their claim to material autonomy and economic success. Lupton uses media theory and close reading to suggest the desire of eighteenth-century readers to attribute sentience to technologies and objects that entertain them. Rather than a historical study of print technology, Knowing Books offers a humanist interpretation of the will to cede agency to media. This horizon of theoretical engagement makes Knowing Books at once an account of the least studied decades of the eighteenth century and a work of relevance for those interested in new attitudes toward media in the twenty-first.

eISBN: 978-0-8122-0521-3
Subjects: Language & Literature
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Table of Contents
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-iv)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. v-vi)
  3. Prologue
    Prologue (pp. vii-xiv)

    I began thinking about this book in England in the mid-1990s. In those days my interest in self-conscious literature led me to fairly well defined places. The reflexive play that made writing self-conscious revealed how language worked as a set of constructed meanings and conventions, and self-conscious fiction exposed the operation of narrative: Miguel de Cervantes, Laurence Sterne, and Italo Calvino wrote, for instance, more self-consciously than Samuel Richardson, Thomas Hardy, and Joseph Conrad. But more important, literary theory seemed able to open up almost any text in these reflexive terms. Postcolonial and poststructuralist theory placed self-consciousness on the side...

  4. Introduction: Giving Power to the Medium
    Introduction: Giving Power to the Medium (pp. 1-20)

    In 1766, Evan Lloyd published at his own cost “The Powers of the Pen,” a poem satirizing the mid-century market in literature. Lloyd presents readers mindlessly clamouring after sentimental tales, life histories, novels, and religious writing, and authors egged on by poverty and mercenary booksellers to produce these forms as efficiently as possible. In this energetic world of super-fluous literary production, Lloyd describes pens rather than minds generating different kinds of text, imagining as the ultimate piece of hack writer’s equipment a pen so indifferent to content that it can write everything:

    Can by the Foot sob, whine and sigh,...

  5. CHAPTER 1 Powerlessness as Entertainment
    CHAPTER 1 Powerlessness as Entertainment (pp. 21-46)

    In the years before and immediately after Tristram Shandy appeared, a significant number of lesser-known but equally self-conscious novels were published. Most of these contain only moderately interestingly romances, adventures, and life narratives. But they are framed and delivered by well-characterized narrators possessed of the disarming power to describe the flaws of novel writing and to reprimand and banter with fictional readers. The narrator of one of the more successful fictions of the period, the anonymous History of Charlotte Summers, the Fortunate Parish Girl (1750), comments in this spirit on the interpretive activities of those reading the novel. His intrusions...

  6. CHAPTER 2 What It-Narratives Know About Their Authors
    CHAPTER 2 What It-Narratives Know About Their Authors (pp. 47-69)

    In 1770, after reading Charles Johnstone’s Chrysal, Adventures of a Guinea (1760), one of the century’s most popular and extended it-narratives, Henry Mackenzie summed up the experience as being “like looking on a collection of dry’d serpants; one trembles at the idea of life in Creatures so mischievous to man.”¹ Mackenzie’s response captures the way speaking coaches and coats and coins appealed to the imagination of readers as phenomenologically disturbing experiments, proposing the possibility that something nonhuman could acquire its own form of consciousness. From a twenty-first-century perspective, the idea of a car, a coin, or a book being conscious...

  7. CHAPTER 3 The Theory of Paper
    CHAPTER 3 The Theory of Paper (pp. 70-94)

    While the last two chapters have described the bootstrapping operation of texts that invent an autonomy for themselves by dwelling on their reception and production, this one is concerned with texts that seem to have a more solid material referent: paper. The philosophical texts I discuss here all try to know the ground on which they are written. “This paper,” which Hume and James Beattie both invoke, turns out, however, to feed some of the period’s deepest skeptical concerns. Although paper can appear a self-evident thing in the writer’s private world, it can also vanish as an elusive and ungraspable...

  8. CHAPTER 4 Sermons Written on the Screen of Print
    CHAPTER 4 Sermons Written on the Screen of Print (pp. 95-121)

    As the last chapter suggested, one of the things that has made paper visible in the twenty-first century is what Derrida calls its “withdrawal” from the scenes of writing and reading.¹ In place of the reality of paper, we are left, Derrida argues, with its figurative legacy. His point coincides with the case made more empirically by media theorists for the way the book and the letter “withdraw” from our lives but remain visible through remediation as newly conspicuous signs of writing, fundamental to our understanding the digital interface in terms of “mail,” “pages,” “fonts,” etc. This chapter and the...

  9. CHAPTER 5 Gray and Mackenzie Printing on the Wall
    CHAPTER 5 Gray and Mackenzie Printing on the Wall (pp. 122-150)

    On a real eighteenth-century Greenwich window, left intact by pure chance and now held in an archaeological collection in London, one can read the misspelled but clearly etched inscriptions of three window cleaners:

    Wm Cavells Cleand these Windows

    May 20 1742 in the 5 Year of his

    Aprantiship

    I John Wilkinson

    Cleand this Window

    August 8th 1781

    I SJ Letton cleand this Window

    in the Last year of his Apprentishp

    August 6 1794

    John Wilkinson, the second of these writers, accompanied his name with a small picture of himself, adding to the sense that these words protest against rather than...

  10. NOTES
    NOTES (pp. 151-168)
  11. BIBLIOGRAPHY
    BIBLIOGRAPHY (pp. 169-180)
  12. INDEX
    INDEX (pp. 181-182)
  13. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS (pp. 183-184)
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