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Everywhere and Nowhere Mark Vareschi

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Everywhere and Nowhere By Mark Vareschi

Everywhere and Nowhere by Mark Vareschi


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Summary

Everywhereand Nowhere

Everywhere and Nowhere Summary

Everywhere and Nowhere: Anonymity and Mediation in Eighteenth-Century Britain by Mark Vareschi

A fascinating analysis of anonymous publication centuries before the digital age


Everywhere and Nowhere considers the ubiquity of anonymity and mediation in the publication and circulation of eighteenth-century British literaturebefore the Romantic creation of the authorand what this means for literary criticism. Anonymous authorship was typical of the time, yet literary scholars and historians have been generally unable to account for it as anything more than a footnote or curiosity.

Mark Vareschi shows the entangled relationship between mediation and anonymity, revealing the nonhuman agency of the printed text. Drawing richly on quantitative analysis and robust archival work, Vareschi brings together philosophy, literary theory, and media theory in a trenchant analysis, uncovering a history of textual engagement and interpretation that does not hinge on the known authorial subject.

In discussing anonymous poetry, drama, and the novel along with anonymously published writers such as Daniel Defoe, Frances Burney, and Walter Scott, he unveils a theory of mediation that renews broader questions about agency and intention. Vareschi argues that textual intentionality is a property of nonhuman, material media rather than human subjects alone, allowing the anonymous literature of the eighteenth century to speak to contemporary questions of meaning in the philosophy of language. Vareschi closes by exploring dubious claims about the death of anonymity and the reexplosion of anonymity with the coming of the digital. Ultimately, Everywhere and Nowhere reveals the long history of print anonymity so central to the risks and benefits of the digital culture.

Everywhere and Nowhere Reviews

"Literary critics, asked to summarize their research, are often asked, Who are your authors? Everywhere and Nowhere cleverly baffles this question and turns our attention to anonymity. Bracketing out the author, Mark Vareschi brings into sight other features of publication: namely, networks of writing and reception and a complex of print and performance. He works impressively with bibliographic records, booksellers catalogs, advertisements, and paratextual material, like tables of contents. His careful bibliometric work establishes changing percentages of anonymous publication across decades and genres. This is fresh, compelling, detail-rich scholarship and essential reading."Brad Pasanek, author of Metaphors of Mind: An Eighteenth-Century Dictionary

"Everywhere and Nowhere is that rare thing: a genuinely interdisciplinary study, capacious and illuminating, of how anonymous authorship impacts meaning across genres and media. In Mark Vareschis hands, anonymity is transformed into a lens for reexamining the most fundamental literary concepts (authorship and intention, medium, textuality) and renovating themnot just in the domain of print, but across the rich media ecologies of the eighteenth century."Michael Gamer, University of Pennsylvania


"Vareschis intelligent and well-argued book opens up intriguing questions about the relationships between authors, texts, and readers, and he makes excellent use of bibliometric data to support his claims. It serves as a valuable reminder that eighteenth-century conceptions of authorship were often very different from our own and provides a wealth of data that should help to recontextualize the decisions of so many canonical eighteenth-century authors to publish at least some of their works anonymously."Journal of British Studies

"This revelatory study provides a new interdisciplinary examination of the notion of anonymity in the eighteenth century."Modern Language Notes

"Even as it defines anonymous and attributed works as part of a shared discourse, criticism often cordons them off from one another by making anonymous works serve as examples of a discourse that then warrants a more extensive reading in the attributed text. By drawing attention to the literary networks in which anonymous publication was enmeshed, Everywhere and Nowhere convincingly illustrates how much we miss about the eighteenth century when we treat anonymous works as second-class citizens."Eighteenth Century Fiction

"Vareschis book employs a variety of tools and disciplines to consider how authorial anonymity sheds light on processes of mediation in the long eighteenth century."The BARS Review

About Mark Vareschi

Mark Vareschi is assistant professor of English at the University of WisconsinMadison.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Everywhere and Nowhere
1. Anonymous as Author
2. Acting Plays and Reading Plays: Intermediation and Anonymity
3. Attribution, Circulation, and Defoe
4. Motive, Intention, Anonymity
Epilogue: Anonymity and Media Shift
Acknowledgments
Appendix
Notes
Index

Additional information

GOR013803559
9781517904074
1517904072
Everywhere and Nowhere: Anonymity and Mediation in Eighteenth-Century Britain by Mark Vareschi
Used - Like New
Paperback
University of Minnesota Press
2018-12-11
224
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
The book has been read, but looks new. The book cover has no visible wear, and the dust jacket is included if applicable. No missing or damaged pages, no tears, possible very minimal creasing, no underlining or highlighting of text, and no writing in the margins

Customer Reviews - Everywhere and Nowhere