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E-book: Writing in Public

(Dalhousie University)
  • Format: PDF+DRM
  • Pub. Date: 01-Nov-2018
  • Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781421426327
  • Format - PDF+DRM
  • Price: 61,75 €*
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  • This ebook is for personal use only. E-Books are non-refundable.
  • Format: PDF+DRM
  • Pub. Date: 01-Nov-2018
  • Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781421426327

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What is the role of literary writing in democratic society?

Building upon his previous work on the emergence of literature, Trevor Ross offers a history of how the public function of literature changed as a result of developing press freedoms during the period from 1760 to 1810. Writing in Public examines the laws of copyright, defamation, and seditious libel to show what happened to literary writing once certain forms of discourse came to be perceived as public and entitled to freedom from state or private control.

Ross argues thatwith liberty of expression becoming entrenched as a national valuethe legal constraints on speech had to be reconceived, becoming less a set of prohibitions on its content than an arrangement for managing the public sphere. The public was free to speak on any subject, but its speech, jurists believed, had to follow certain ground rules, as formalized in laws aimed at limiting private ownership of culturally significant works, maintaining civility in public discourse, and safeguarding public deliberation from the coercions of propaganda. For speech to be truly free, however, there had to be an enabling exception to the rules.

Since the late eighteenth century, Ross suggests, the role of this exception has been performed by the idea of literature. Literature is valued as the form of expression that, in allowing us to say anything and in any form, attests to our liberty. Yet, paradoxically, it is only by occupying no definable place within the public sphere that literature can remain as indeterminate as the public whose self-reinvention it serves.

Reviews

Writing in Public offers a brilliant synthesis of a massive set of interrelated topics: how the public role of literature gradually and radically shifted; its legal, social and literary causes; and its long-term implications for the public. For those grappling with the question of what literature's public functions were or were supposed to do, Ross offers both an insightful and provoking guide. Andrew Benjamin Bricker, Ghent University, Review of English Studies Writing in Public makes an ambitious argument with ramifications both for our reading of eighteenth-century literature and our contemporary understanding of literature as a form of public speech. One key strength of Ross's book is the way that highly specific examples are engagingly narrated and then open out into broad historical claims . . . [ S]cholars in all areas of eighteenth century studies, as well as historians of free speech and the law, will find it a valuable resource. Hannah Doherty Hudson, Eighteenth-Century Fiction What Ross styles 'a cultural history of ideas about literature's place in the public sphere,' is timely and worth reading . . . This strikingly original volume is largely juridical; while Ben Jonson, Daniel Defoe, and Alexander Pope have their cameos, Writing in Public devotes itself to jurists and their legal reasoning as they debated intellectual property, perpetual copyright, the liberty of criticism, seditious libel, and so on. University of Toronto Quarterly

More info

What is the role of literary writing in democratic society?
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Writing in Public 1(34)
COPYRIGHT
1 Literature in the Public Domain
35(40)
2 The Fate of Style in an Age of Intellectual Property
75(36)
DEFAMATION AND PRIVACY
3 What Does Literature Publicize?
111(39)
4 How Criticism Became Privileged Speech: The Case of Carr v. Hood (1808)
150(25)
SEDITIOUS LIBEL
5 Literature and the Freedom of Mind
175(50)
Epilogue: Unacknowledged Legislators 225(14)
Notes 239(50)
Index 289
Trevor Ross teaches English at Dalhousie University. He is the author of The Making of the English Literary Canon: From the Middle Ages to the Late Eighteenth Century.