Table of Contents
Introduction: Researching the Nineteenth-Century Periodical Press: Case Studies (Alexis Easley, Andrew King, and John Morton)
Chapter 1: Researching a Single Journalist: Alfred Austin (John Morton)
Chapter 2: Researching Gender Issues: Eliza Cook, Charlotte Cushman, and Transatlantic Celebrity, 1845–54 (Alexis Easley)
Chapter 3: Bibliographic Issues: Titles, Numbers, Frequencies (Beth Gaskell)
Chapter 4: Researching Periodical Networks: William and Mary Howitt (Joanne Shattock)
Chapter 5: Researching a Periodical Genre: Classifications, Codes and Relational Terms (Fionnuala Dillane)
Chapter 6: Researching the Relationship between Two Periodicals: Representations of George Eliot in the Girl’s Own Paper and Atalanta (Beth Rodgers)
Chapter 7: Researching Transnational/Transatlantic Connections: The 1865 Atlantic Cable Expedition (Catherine Waters)
Chapter 8: Researching Technologies of Printing and Illustration: Clement Shorter, Phil May, and Photomechanical Reproduction in the Sketch (Gerry Beegan)
Chapter 9: Who Do You Think They Were? What Genealogy Databases Can Do for Victorian Periodical Studies (Marianne Van Remoortel)
Chapter 10: The Body in the Archive: Reading the Working Woman’s Reading (Margaret Beetham)
Chapter 11: Researching Science and Periodicals: Satire and Scientific Jargon in Punch (Gregory Tate)
Chapter 12: Researching Empire and Periodicals (Chandrika Kaul)
Bibliography