
The Novel and the Blank
A Literary History of the Book Trades in Eighteenth-Century British America
Matthew P. Brown(Author)
Johns Hopkins University Press
Published on 26. August 2025
Book
Hardback
296 pages
978-1-4214-5282-1 (ISBN)
Description
Explores American colonial print culture's diverse output and how these texts shaped public life and modernity.
Finalist for the SHARP Book History Prize by the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing, Inc
In The Novel and the Blank, Matthew P. Brown uncovers the vibrant, overlooked world of the eighteenth-century British American print shop. Printing more than just novels and pamphlets, these workshops produced a kaleidoscope of printed materials-from legal blanks and almanacs to runaway slave ads and chapbooks-that reflected the complexities of colonial life.
Brown paints a rich cultural history of the time, identifying and describing the steady sellers that stabilized the trade and the print surges ignited by religious revivals of the 1730s-1740s and political upheavals of the revolutionary era. He explores the connections among commercial caution, literary expression, and oppressive structures like the slave trade. The book advances our knowledge of early modern culture in several ways: by providing a rounded portrait of colonial and early national literary culture; by examining a steadily popular canon rarely read by modern scholars; and by depicting the lived religion of readers, writers, and printers who participated in this literary culture.
With a sharp focus on everyday texts and readers-rather than on the canon of works constructed by modern scholars-Brown reimagines the public sphere of the eighteenth century as a vivifying experience. Through an innovative blend of historical rigor and cultural insight, The Novel and the Blank reveals how ordinary print shaped extraordinary shifts in religion, secularism, and the ways we understand modernity itself.
Finalist for the SHARP Book History Prize by the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing, Inc
In The Novel and the Blank, Matthew P. Brown uncovers the vibrant, overlooked world of the eighteenth-century British American print shop. Printing more than just novels and pamphlets, these workshops produced a kaleidoscope of printed materials-from legal blanks and almanacs to runaway slave ads and chapbooks-that reflected the complexities of colonial life.
Brown paints a rich cultural history of the time, identifying and describing the steady sellers that stabilized the trade and the print surges ignited by religious revivals of the 1730s-1740s and political upheavals of the revolutionary era. He explores the connections among commercial caution, literary expression, and oppressive structures like the slave trade. The book advances our knowledge of early modern culture in several ways: by providing a rounded portrait of colonial and early national literary culture; by examining a steadily popular canon rarely read by modern scholars; and by depicting the lived religion of readers, writers, and printers who participated in this literary culture.
With a sharp focus on everyday texts and readers-rather than on the canon of works constructed by modern scholars-Brown reimagines the public sphere of the eighteenth century as a vivifying experience. Through an innovative blend of historical rigor and cultural insight, The Novel and the Blank reveals how ordinary print shaped extraordinary shifts in religion, secularism, and the ways we understand modernity itself.
Reviews / Votes
Brown raises the minimalist stakes in his exuberant, erudite, occasionally infuriating study The Novel and the Blank. A connoisseur of print minutiae, and a virtuoso of what he nicely terms "small data", Brown zeroes in on the mainstays of early print shops in colonial North America.-Times Literary Supplement Wonderfully alive, historically and theoretically enriching, The Novel and the Blank offers a material and experiential substrate to the generalizations and abstractions of public sphere theory, through attention to seemingly recalcitrant print artifacts, from poignant indentures to gnarly chapbooks, and from the literature of devotional enthusiasm to its echoes in the impassioned and subjectively unstable novel of sensibility.
-William and Mary Quarterly
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Baltimore, MD
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
17 s/w Abbildungen
17 Illustrations, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 233 mm
Width: 154 mm
Thickness: 26 mm
Weight
556 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4214-5282-1 (9781421452821)
DOI
10.56021/9781421452821
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Matthew P. Brown is an associate professor in the Center for the Book and the Department of English at the University of Iowa.
Content
Contents
Acknowledgements
Preface: The Short Eighteenth Century
Introduction: Publication Culture and Literary Value
1. Franklin's Beat
2. Publishing Evangelicalism
3. Bell's Liberties
4. Known Unknowns
5. British American Judas
Notes
Index
Acknowledgements
Preface: The Short Eighteenth Century
Introduction: Publication Culture and Literary Value
1. Franklin's Beat
2. Publishing Evangelicalism
3. Bell's Liberties
4. Known Unknowns
5. British American Judas
Notes
Index