The Baddington Peerage

The Baddington Peerage

Author: George Augustus Sala

Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand

Published: 2022-07-21

Total Pages: 337

ISBN-13: 3375098383

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Reprint of the original, first published in 1860.


George Augustus Sala and the Nineteenth-Century Periodical Press

George Augustus Sala and the Nineteenth-Century Periodical Press

Author: Peter Blake

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2016-03-09

Total Pages: 336

ISBN-13: 1317128761

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In his study of the journalist George Augustus Sala, Peter Blake discusses the way Sala’s personal style, along with his innovations in form, influenced the New Journalism at the end of the nineteenth century. Blake places Sala at the centre of nineteenth-century newspapers and periodicals and examines his prolific contributions to newspapers and periodicals in the context of contemporary debates and issues surrounding his work. Sala’s journalistic style, Blake argues, was a product of the very different mediums in which he worked, whether it was the visual arts, bohemian journalism, novels, pornographic plays, or travel writing. Harkening back to a time when journalism and fiction were closely connected, Blake’s book not only expands our understanding of one of the more prominent and interesting journalists and personalities of the nineteenth century, but also sheds light on prominent nineteenth-century writers and artists such as Charles Dickens, Mathew Arnold, William Powell Frith, Henry Vizetelly, and Mary Elizabeth Braddon.


Dickens’s ‘Young Men’

Dickens’s ‘Young Men’

Author: P.D. Edwards

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2016-12-05

Total Pages: 368

ISBN-13: 1351944355

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In Dickens's lifetime, and for a generation or so after, Edmund Hodgson Yates and George Augustus Sala were the best known and most successful of his "young men" - the budding writers who acknowledged him as their guide and mentor and whose literary careers the publicity and privately fostered. The book considers their personal and literary relationships with Dickens, with each other, and with other writers of the period, Bohemian and "respectable", including Yates's arch-enemy, his post-office colleague Anthony Trollope. But it also demonstrates that their life and writings - their fiction, private letters and occasional essays in verse and drama, as well as their already recognised contributions to the development of the "new journalism" - are interesting and historically illuminating in their own right, not merely pale reflections of the glory of greater writers. Extensive use is made of previously unpublished material.