Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2022 • Periodical Formats in the Market

Special Issue

Ramtke | Periodical Formats in the Market: Economies of Space and Time, Competition and Transfer | Journal of European Periodical Studies (ugent.be)

Nora Ramtke, Mirela Husić and Christian A. Bachmann

 2023-02-08  Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2022 • Periodical Formats in the Market • 1–7

Norrick-Rühl | Periodicity, Subscription, and Mass Circulation: Mail-Order Book Culture Reconsidered | Journal of European Periodical Studies (ugent.be)

Corinna Norrick-Rühl

 2023-02-08  Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2022 • Periodical Formats in the Market • 8–25

Fröhlich | Logics of Re-Using Photographs: Negotiating the Mediality of the Magazine | Journal of European Periodical Studies (ugent.be)

Vincent Fröhlich, Alice Morin and Jens Ruchatz

 2023-02-08  Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2022 • Periodical Formats in the Market • 26–51

Mayer | Girls Girls Girls Girls Girls: The Trans-Atlantic Mass Magazine Culture of the 1920s as a Gendered Affair | Journal of European Periodical Studies (ugent.be)

Ruth Mayer

 2023-02-08  Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2022 • Periodical Formats in the Market • 52–73

Gretz | From Pure Art to Sheer Luxury: Magazines as Ornamental Constellations and the Emergence of Aesthetic Capitalism in the Early Twentieth Century | Journal of European Periodical Studies (ugent.be)

Daniela Gretz and Marcus Krause

 2023-02-08  Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2022 • Periodical Formats in the Market • 74–96

Ernst | Outside the Mainstream Press: Language, Materiality, and Temporality in Microzines | Journal of European Periodical Studies (ugent.be)

Jutta Ernst, Sabina Fazli and Oliver Scheiding

 2023-02-08  Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2022 • Periodical Formats in the Market • 97–114

Neuffer | In Time: Periodical Theories and Philosophies of History in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries | Journal of European Periodical Studies (ugent.be)

Moritz Neuffer

 2023-02-08  Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2022 • Periodical Formats in the Market • 115–129

Articles

Vanacker | Fashioning ‘Belgian’ Literature and Cultural Mediatorship in the Journal littéraire et politique des Pays-Bas autrichiens (1786) | Journal of European Periodical Studies (ugent.be)

Beatrijs Vanacker, Charlotte van Hooijdonk, Vanessa Van Puyvelde and Tom Verschaffel

 2023-02-08  Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2022 • Periodical Formats in the Market • 130–146

Field Notes

Stead | European Periodical Research 2020–30: Voices and Visions from the ESPRit 2021 Roundtable | Journal of European Periodical Studies (ugent.be)

Evanghelia Stead, Fionnuala Dillane, Jutta Ernst, Fabio Guidali, Mara Logaldo and Jens Ruchatz

 2023-02-08  Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2022 • Periodical Formats in the Market • 147–163

Reviews

Stoeger | Review of Gowan Dawson, Bernard Lightman, Sally Shuttleworth, and Jonathan R. Topham, eds, Science Periodicals in Nineteenth-Century Britain: Constructing Scientific Communities (2020) | Journal of European Periodical Studies (ugent.be)

Alexander Stoeger

 2023-02-08  Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2022 • Periodical Formats in the Market • 164–166

Mussell | Review of Clare Pettitt, Serial Forms: The Unfinished Project of Modernity, 1815-1848 (2020) | Journal of European Periodical Studies (ugent.be)

James Mussell

 2023-02-08  Volume 7 • Issue 2 • 2022 • Periodical Formats in the Market • 167–170

Thank you for your registration! The organisers of the ESPRit conference will send you further information via e-mail.

Special issue of the Journal of European Periodical Studies Vol 6 No 2 (2021): Modernity and National Identity in Popular Magazines

Table of Contents

SPECIAL ISSUE

Tim Satterthwaite, Online Conferences: A New Paradigm for Periodical Studies?

Carey Snyder, The Global Dialogics of the New Age

Phaedra Claeys, Individual Responsibility for the Common Cause? Everyday Preservationism in the Interwar Russian Émigré Newsmagazine Illyustrirovannaya Rossiya

Elena Ogliari, The Past Contains a Promise of Regeneration: Narratives of Ireland’s Future in Early-Twentieth-Century Juvenile Periodicals

 

Chara Kolokytha, Le Génie du Nord: Sélection and the Advocacy of a Cosmopolitan Northern Culture

Anne Reynes-Delobel, An Impossible Task? Reconciling Europeanism and National Popular Culture in Caliban (1947–51)

ARTICLES

Tijl Nuyts, Veerle Fraeters, Mediating Medieval Mystical Literature in Interwar Belgium: The Histoire Croisée of Hadewijch’s ‘First Vision’ in the Periodical Hermès (1933–39)

Christian A. Bachmann, Nora Ramtke, Planning Virtual Conferences in the Humanities: A Detailed Look at the 9th International ESPRit Conference

REVIEWS

Sofia Prado Huggins, Review of David Finkelstein, ed., The Edinburgh History of the British and Irish Press: Expansion and Evolution, 1800–1900 (2020)

Sze Wah Sarah Lee, Review of Faith Binckes and Carey Snyder, eds, Women, Periodicals, and Print Culture in Britain, 1890s–1920s: The Modernist Period (2019)

 

Alison E. Martin, Review of Andreas Beck, Nicola Kaminski, Volker Mergenthaler, and Jens Ruchatz, eds, Visuelles Design: Die Journalseite als gestaltete Fläche / Visual Design: The Periodical Page as a Designed Surface (2019)

John Morton, Review of Joanne Shattock, ed., Journalism and the Periodical Press in Nineteenth-Century Britain (2017/2019)

 

Maaike Koffeman, Review of Evanghelia Stead, Sisyphe heureux. Les revues artistiques et littéraires, Approches et figures (2020)

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ESPRit online seminars, Autumn 2021: ‘Crossover influences and local identities of the popular illustrated periodicals of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries’

Autumn series 2021, Session 3 - December 10, 3PM CET:

1) Yelizaveta Raykhlina (New York University), From Paris to the Russian Provinces: Russian-language Fashion Magazines of the late 1830s and 1840s as Domains of Cultural Adaptation and Women’s Entrepreneurship”.

This presentation explores the role of the Russian-language illustrated fashion press as a forum for translating and adapting French fashion for Russian readers during the late 1830s and through the 1840s. These years serve as a turning point in the development of the Russian press, as they mark the emergence of the first Russian fashion magazines that were founded by women entrepreneurs. Coming from non-noble origins, these women publisher-editors (Elizaveta Safonova and Mariia Koshelevskaia) had the unusual role of reporting on French fashion to Moscow and Petersburg high society and, importantly, on French and Russian fashion to provincial Russian noblewomen. The purpose of their magazines was not to imitate foreign styles, but to adapt them to Russian needs; in the process, these fashion magazines joined a broader conversation taking place across the Russian periodical press about defining “Russian” culture. The long print run of these magazines is a testament to their editors’ successful strategies, made all the more impressive at a time when new Russian periodicals folded within a year of their launch. While the Russian-language press was always in conversation with the European presses of the time (particularly French, German, and English), current scholarship tends to treat Russian periodicals separately. This presentation aims to stimulate a conversation about integrating Russian press history into a broader European context."

2) Effrosyni Zacharatou (Athens School of Fine Arts), From Europe to Greece: The illustrated magazine as a distinct form

The proposed paper, based on my doctoral research, considers the ways in which Greek illustrated magazines emerged in relation to their relationship to the broader, and older, currents of European periodical publishing. The adoption of such a comparative approach is necessary given the absence of any monograph, or indeed any systematic research, on the Greek illustrated magazine, despite the fact that it was a major cultural phenomenon, and an integral part of the visual culture of Greece. The paper begins with an analysis of the circumstances and conditions that led to the emergence of the illustrated magazine in Greece at the beginning of the 19th century. Then it briefly considers a number of key issues, including the following:
-            the development in Greece of printing technology, especially lithography and engraving,
-            the impact of industrialisation and transport,
-            the growth of markets and early capitalist social relations,
-            changes in education, culture and ideology, particularly the influence of Saint- Simonianism, social reform movements, the growth of literacy and the rise of the bourgeoisie, along with notions of egalitarianism, the democratization of art, and the emergence of nationalism.
The remainder of the paper considers the ‘external’ characteristics of readership, form, format and pagination, as well as such ‘internal’ characteristics as content (editorial, advertising, image quantity and quality, organic relation between language and image) drawn from a limited number of examples of Greek illustrated magazines. In conclusion, the paper speculates on the relationship between the growth of such periodicals in Greece and the making, at broadly the same time, of an urban middle-class from which it drew its producers, advertisers and readers.