Print Markets and Political Dissent: Publishers in Central Europe, 1800-1870

Author:   James M. Brophy (Francis H. Squire Professor of History, University of Delaware)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198845720


Pages:   480
Publication Date:   20 June 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained


Our Price $219.95 Quantity:  
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Print Markets and Political Dissent: Publishers in Central Europe, 1800-1870


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Overview

Moving book history in a new direction, this study examines publishers as brokers of Central Europe's political public sphere. They created international print markets, translated new texts, launched new journals, supported outspoken authors, and experimented with popular formats. Most of all, they contested censorship with finesse and resolve, thereby undermining the aim of Prussia and Austria to criminalize democratic thought. By packaging dissent through popular media, publishers cultivated broad readerships, promoted political literacy, and refashioned citizenship ideals. As political actors, intellectual midwives, and cultural mediators, publishers speak to a broad range of scholarly interests. Their outsize personalities, their entrepreneurial zeal, and their publishing achievements portray how print markets shaped the political world.The narrow perimeters of political communication in the late-absolutist states of Prussia and Austria curtailed the open market of ideas. The publishing industry contested this information order, working both within and outside legal parameters to create a modern public sphere. Their expansion of print markets, their cat-and-mouse game with censors, and their ingenuity in packaging political commentary sheds light on the production and reception of dissent. Against the backdrop of censorship and police surveillance, the successes and failures of these citizens of print tell us much about nineteenth-century civil society and Central Europe's tortuous pathway to political modernization. Cutting across a range of disciplines, this study will engage social and political historians as well as scholars of publishing, literary criticism, cultural studies, translation, and the public sphere. The history of Central Europe's print markets between Napoleon and the era of unification doubles as a political tale. It sheds important new light on political communication and how publishers exposed German-language readers to the Age of Democratic Revolution.

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Author:   James M. Brophy (Francis H. Squire Professor of History, University of Delaware)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198845720


ISBN 10:   0198845723
Pages:   480
Publication Date:   20 June 2024
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   To order   Availability explained

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James M. Brophy is the Francis H. Squire Professor of History at the University of Delaware. He received his BA from Vassar College, trained at Eberhard Karls Universität in Tübingen, Germany, and took his PhD in modern European history at Indiana University. He is the author of Popular Culture and the Public Sphere in the Rhineland, 1800-1850 (2007), Capitalism, Railroads, and Politics in Prussia, 1830-1870 (1998), and over three dozen essays in journals and books. He is the recipient of numerous grants and fellowships, including those from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the American Academy in Berlin. He is the former president of the Central European History Society and currently serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Modern History as well as on the academic advisory council of the Marx-Engels Gesamtausgabe.

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