The Literary Index to American Magazines, 1850-1900
By (Author) Daniel A. Wells
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
21st June 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
Bibliographies, catalogues
016.8108005
Hardback
456
American literary magazines published between 1850 and 1900 were an outlet for numerous creative works, book reviews, and other material. Like Herman Melville, Mark Twain, and Henry James, many of the authors who wrote for these magazines are among the most famous American authors. This index makes readily available for the first time thousands of references to major and minor literary figures and their works. It is also a guide to the many thousands of facts, opinions, and comments on 19th-century American culture that are contained in literary magazines of the period. Alphabetically arranged entries cover roughly a thousand authors, along with topics such as the novel, poetry, drama and theater, Darwinism, women, American literature, and copyright law. During the latter half of the 19th-century, literary magazines flourished in America. Young writers enjoying their first important publication stand shoulder to shoulder with established writers in magazine issues that are so rich with original material that they often resemble anthologies. Perhaps even more significantly, editors and reviewers doggedly plied their trade of evaluating and criticizing promising new volumes, analyzing trends and movements, and recording the rise and fall of reputations. The Literary Index is the result of combing 11 prominent American literary magazines for every reference to all major and hundreds of minor writers and their works that appeared on the American literary scene in the second half of the 19th century. Brought to light are tens of thousands of references to writers, works, and issues that have never been studied before. This rich source of material drawn from all sections of the magazinesoriginal works, articles, reviews, gossip columns, and correspondence, provides unprecedented access to information on the receptions of major works, the comings and goings of writers and obscure works. The 700 author entries are arranged alphabetically and include citations for some 7000 titles. In addition, there are exhaustive and comprehensive lists of citations for general subjects such as the novel, poetry, drama and theater, American literature, Darwinism, and women, as well as a section on the century-long battle over the passage of an international copyright law. Every aspect of the literary world of late 19th-century America is represented, making this volume an indispensable reference work for scholars.
On the critical points of usefulness and accuracy, this index is a winner. Libraries strong in 19th-century American literature will value its coverage of 13 periodicals (e.g., The Atlantic Monthly, Scribner's Magazine, The North American Review) and the access it provides to articles by and about more than 1,000 writers.... Recommended for academic and public libraries with 19th-century American literature collections.-Choice
Wells has indexed 11 magazines (among them the Atlantic Monthly. Harper's. Scribner's, and the North American Review) for this period by author and a few broad subjects...Well's work will make it easier for literary scholars to do theirs. The Literary Index is recommended for academic libraries that own most of the magazines indexed.-Booklist/Reference Books Bulletin
"Wells has indexed 11 magazines (among them the Atlantic Monthly. Harper's. Scribner's, and the North American Review) for this period by author and a few broad subjects...Well's work will make it easier for literary scholars to do theirs. The Literary Index is recommended for academic libraries that own most of the magazines indexed."-Booklist/Reference Books Bulletin
"On the critical points of usefulness and accuracy, this index is a winner. Libraries strong in 19th-century American literature will value its coverage of 13 periodicals (e.g., The Atlantic Monthly, Scribner's Magazine, The North American Review) and the access it provides to articles by and about more than 1,000 writers.... Recommended for academic and public libraries with 19th-century American literature collections."-Choice
DANIEL A. WELLS is Professor of Engish at the University of South Florida, St. Petersburg. He is the author of The Literary Index to American Magazines, 1815-1865 (1980). His many publications on 19th-century American literature include articles on Melville, Poe, Twain and Whitman in journals such as American Literary Realism, American Periodicals, Mark Twain Journal, Melville Extracts, Poe Studies, Studies in the American Renaissance, and Walt Whitman Quarterly.