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Speaking Objects: The Circulation of Stories in Eighteenth-Century Prose Fiction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 October 2020

Abstract

An enormously popular narrative device, speaking objects were used frequently in eighteenth-century British fiction to express authorial concerns about the circulation of books in the public sphere. Relating the speaking object to the author's status in a print culture, works featuring such narrators characteristically align authorship, commodification, and national acculturation. The objects celebrate their capacity to exploit both private and public systems of circulation, such as libraries, banks, booksellers' shops, highways, and taverns. Linking storytelling to commodities and capital, they convey an implicit theory of culture in which literary dissemination, economic exchange, and public use appear homologous. But as object narratives dramatize, such circulation estranges modern authors from their work. Far from mediating between private and public experience or synthesizing national and cosmopolitan values, these narratives record the indiscriminate consumption that characterizes the public sphere in a print culture.

Type
Research Article
Information
PMLA , Volume 113 , Issue 2 , March 1998 , pp. 212 - 226
Copyright
Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1998

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