New Grub Street (Gissing, 1891)

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Gissing, George. New Grub Street. Pub. 1891. Ed. Katherine Mullin. Oxford World's Classics, 2016.

  • pub 3 volumes 1891 by Smith, Elder

Notes

  • starts 1882, and this temporal fixity is key
  • 10 milvains bourgeois (but not too comfortable)
  • 13 a distinct meritocratic strain to milvain's bourgeois perspective, "we people of brains"
  • 14 jasper remembers meeting Yule at the British Museum reading room
  • the Yules are "dwellers in the valley of the shadow of Books"
    • 18 this jasper says specifically means BM Reading Room

=General

  • interesting to refract Reardon through Milvain at the start

Themes

Reading/Writing

  • 12 market for children's fiction and religious stories
  • 22 Yule presents an anti "spreading civilization" arg about literary trade, in line with moral concerns about novel reading

Authorship

  • 6 reardon's missed expectations of "geometrical increase" in his fortunes after publishing one novel
  • 8 "Literature nowadays is a trade" -- whole para
    • vs "unpractical artist"
    • cont on 12: a decisively anti romantic view (he as much as says "we can't all be George Eliot")
  • 21 John Yule calls literary profession "pernicious," reminiscent of Pendennis (Thackeray, 1849)

Journalism/periodicals

  • 8-9 milvain associated "magazines and newspapers and foreign publishers" with the market, with which a successful writer of 1882 must associate himself
  • 20 Yule mentions the same periodical reviewing the same novel twice, good and bad (note says this happened to NGS in Saturday Review) -- a bookish scandal

Materiality

  • 6 touches of "decorative spirit of 1882" at Milvains', i.e. William Morris aestheticism
  • 17 Yules a stationer family. eldest brother John Yule became a wealthy paper manufacturer
    • 21 Jasper thanks John for cheap paper, this a different state of affairs than in the 1850s with taxes on knowledge

Shakespeare

  • 12 "We talk of literature as a trade, not homer, Dante, or shakespeare"