The American nineteenth century witnessed a media explosion
unprecedented in human history. New communications technologies seemed
to be everywhere, offering opportunities and threats that seem
powerfully familiar to us as we experience today’s digital
revolution. Walt Whitman’s poetry reveled in the potentials of his
time: “See, the many-cylinder’d steam printing-press,” he wrote,
“See, the electric telegraph, stretching across the Continent, from
the Western Sea to Manhattan.” Still, as the budding poet learned,
books neither sell themselves nor move themselves: without an
efficient set of connections to get books to readers, the democratic
media-saturated future Whitman imagined would have remained
warehoused. Whitman’s works sometimes ran through the
“many-cylinder’d steam printing press” and were carried in bulk
on “the strong and quick locomotive.” Yet during his career, his
publications did not follow a progressive path toward mass production
and distribution. Even at the end of his life, in the 1890s as his
fame was growing, the poet was selling copies of his latest works by
hand to visitors at his small house in Camden, New Jersey. Mass media
and centralization were only one part of the rich media world that
Whitman embraced. Whitman’s Drift asks how the many options for
distributing books and newspapers shaped the way writers wrote and
readers read. Writers like Whitman spoke to the imagination inspired
by media transformations by calling attention to connectedness, to how
literature not only moves us emotionally, but moves around in the
world among people and places. Studying that literature and how it
circulated can help us understand not just how to read Whitman’s
works and times, but how to understand what is happening to our
imaginations now, in the midst of the twenty-first century media
explosion.
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Imagining Literary Distribution
Product details
ISBN
9781609384777
Published
2023
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author