Abstract
This Element offers a multidimensional study of reading practice and sibling rivalry in late eighteenth-century Britain. The case study is the Aberdeen student and disgraced thief Charles Burney's treatment of Evelina (1778), the debut novel of his sister Frances Burney. Coulombeau uses Charles's manuscript poetry, letters, and marginalia, alongside illustrative prints and circulating library archives, to tell the story of how he attempted to control Evelina's reception in an effort to bolster his own socio-literary status. Uniting approaches drawn from literary studies, biography, bibliography, and the history of the book, the Element enriches scholarly understanding of the reception of Frances Burney's fiction, with broader implications for studies of gender, class, kinship and reading in this period. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Reference131 articles.
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2. Literary Coteries and the Making of Modern Print Culture
3. Charles Burney’s Theft of Books at Cambridge;Walker;Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society,1962
4. Carter, Elizabeth and Hannah More Letters to Mary Hamilton, Houghton Library, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. MS Eng 1778.
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