Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Annotated Bibliography
- Ainsworth's Magazine, 1842–1854
- All the Year Round, 1859–1895
- Bentley's Miscellany, 1837–1868
- Bentley's Quarterly Review, 1859–1860
- Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, 1824–1900
- The British and Foreign Review, 1835–1844
- The British Quarterly Review, 1845–1886
- Chambers's (Edinburgh) Journal, 1832–1900
- The Contemporary Review, 1866–1900
- The Cornhill Magazine, 1860–1900
- The Dark Blue, 1871–1873
- The Dublin Review, 1836–1900
- The Dublin University Magazine, 1833–1880
- The Edinburgh Review, 1802–1900
- The Foreign Quarterly Review, 1827–1846
- The Fortnightly Review, 1865–1900
- Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country, 1830–1882
- Good Words, 1860–1900
- Hogg's (Weekly) Instructor, 1845–1856
- The Home and Foreign Review, 1862–1864
- Household Words, 1850–1859
- Howitt's Journal, 1847–1848
- The Leisure Hour, 1852–1900
- The London Quarterly Review, 1853–1900
- The London Review, 1829–1830
- Longman's Magazine, 1882–1900
- Macmillan's Magazine, 1859–1900
- The Modern Review, 1880–1884
- The Monthly Chronicle, 1838–1841
- Murray's Magazine, 1887–1891
- The National Review, 1855–1864
- The National Review, 1883–1900
- The New Monthly Magazine, 1821–1854
- The New Quarterly Magazine, 1873–1880
- The New Review, 1889–1897
- The Nineteenth Century, 1877–1900
- The North British Review, 1844–1871
- The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine, 1856
- The Prospective Review, 1845–1855
- The Quarterly Review, 1824–1900
- The Rambler, 1848–1862
- Saint Pauls, 1867–1874
- The Scottish Review, 1882–1900
- Tait's Edinburgh Magazine, 1832–1855
- Temple Bar, 1860–1900
- The Theological Review, 1864–1879
- Titan: A Monthly Magazine, 1856–1859
- The Westminster Review, 1824–1900
- Key to Indexes
- Author Index
- Subject Index
The Fortnightly Review, 1865–1900
from Annotated Bibliography
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Annotated Bibliography
- Ainsworth's Magazine, 1842–1854
- All the Year Round, 1859–1895
- Bentley's Miscellany, 1837–1868
- Bentley's Quarterly Review, 1859–1860
- Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, 1824–1900
- The British and Foreign Review, 1835–1844
- The British Quarterly Review, 1845–1886
- Chambers's (Edinburgh) Journal, 1832–1900
- The Contemporary Review, 1866–1900
- The Cornhill Magazine, 1860–1900
- The Dark Blue, 1871–1873
- The Dublin Review, 1836–1900
- The Dublin University Magazine, 1833–1880
- The Edinburgh Review, 1802–1900
- The Foreign Quarterly Review, 1827–1846
- The Fortnightly Review, 1865–1900
- Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country, 1830–1882
- Good Words, 1860–1900
- Hogg's (Weekly) Instructor, 1845–1856
- The Home and Foreign Review, 1862–1864
- Household Words, 1850–1859
- Howitt's Journal, 1847–1848
- The Leisure Hour, 1852–1900
- The London Quarterly Review, 1853–1900
- The London Review, 1829–1830
- Longman's Magazine, 1882–1900
- Macmillan's Magazine, 1859–1900
- The Modern Review, 1880–1884
- The Monthly Chronicle, 1838–1841
- Murray's Magazine, 1887–1891
- The National Review, 1855–1864
- The National Review, 1883–1900
- The New Monthly Magazine, 1821–1854
- The New Quarterly Magazine, 1873–1880
- The New Review, 1889–1897
- The Nineteenth Century, 1877–1900
- The North British Review, 1844–1871
- The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine, 1856
- The Prospective Review, 1845–1855
- The Quarterly Review, 1824–1900
- The Rambler, 1848–1862
- Saint Pauls, 1867–1874
- The Scottish Review, 1882–1900
- Tait's Edinburgh Magazine, 1832–1855
- Temple Bar, 1860–1900
- The Theological Review, 1864–1879
- Titan: A Monthly Magazine, 1856–1859
- The Westminster Review, 1824–1900
- Key to Indexes
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
Without a commitment to party or religion, the Fortnightly revealed journalism's breadth. Entries spanned such diverse subjects as British foreign correspondence; imperial, European, and American newspapers; and the women's press in and out of the kingdom.
1. Editor [G. H. Lewes]. “Robert Buchanan.” 1 (1865): 443–58.
Noted that book reviews were often hastily done.
2. Trollope, Anthony. “On Anonymous Literature.” 1 (1865): 491–98.
Commended French journalistic signature because it created professionals with honor. Britain's anonymity suited a newspaper's “prevailing spirit” on politics, but signing other articles would catalyze more careful writing and eliminate the “eulogistic” writing typical of periodical criticism.
3. Gurney, Archer. “France as It Is.” 1 (1865): 721–32.
Flagged French “seizure of English papers,” among them the “respectable Morning Herald”; Charles de Remusat and other admirable writers in the Revue des Deux Mondes; and the political alignment of Paris newspapers.
4. Pelly, Lewis. “British India.” 2 (1865): 31–42.
Spelled out that the British in India once read only the Army List, Gazette, and “a local paper.”
5. Editor [G. H. Lewes]. “Criticism in Relation to Novels.” 3 (1865–66): 352–61.
Fretted that “[e]ven in the best journals,” criticism of novels was too laudatory. The press did not judge novels as literature but by the “ordinary canons which would be applied to a history, an article, or a pamphlet.”
6. Editor [G. H. Lewes]. “Causeries.” 4 (1866): 503–09.
Disdained anonymous criticism because responsibility for it might attach to any writer of the journal where it appeared.
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- Perceptions of the Press in Nineteenth-Century British PeriodicalsA Bibliography, pp. 233 - 260Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2012