Victorian Christmas in Print
About this book
Although people may not realize it, the modern Christmas book market carries on a Victorian legacy. An explosion of Christmas print matter reinvigorated and regularized the holiday during the mid-Victorian period, infusing Christmas with emotionally-charged expectations of reading. Tara Moore elucidates the evolution of Christmas publishing trends that dictated authors writing schedules and reflected gift-giving rituals. As Victorian shopping customs evolved, publishers satisfied consumers with a range of holiday print matter, including novels, ghost stories, periodicals, children s books, and poetry. Ultimately, Victorian Christmas in Print analyzes how the revitalized holiday and the flurry of texts supporting it contributed to English national identity.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Books for Christmas, 1822–1860
- 2 How Victorians Read Christmas
- 3 How Mr. Punch Stole Christmas: The Evolution of the Holiday in Periodicals
- 4 Ghost Stories at Christmas
- 5 The Expansion of Christmas Consumerism: Gifts and Commodities
- 6 The Poetry of Christmas
- 7 Modern Marketing of the Victorian Christmas
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
