Professor Abbie Garrington abbie.garrington@durham.ac.uk
Professor
Professor Abbie Garrington abbie.garrington@durham.ac.uk
Professor
James Purdon
Editor
In the years 1900–20, polar exploration and high-altitude mountaineering became entrenched as features of British newspapers and the pictorial press. Meeting and propagating the appetites of an emerging audience of ‘armchair’ explorers, such publications exploited the opportunities afforded by new printing technologies to offer eye-catching typography and photographic images that conveyed the scale of Alpine adventure, and put the wastes of polar snows into the hands of the reader. Meanwhile, reporting on labour disputes connected to the British mining industry offered the yin to exploration’s icy yang: the chance to convey the greys and blacks of mines and miners through the liberal application of ink. This relationship between the black/white of the mines/snows and the black/white of the page can be seen triangulated by a further force: literary modernism’s development of a kind of spatialised moral economy. This chapter considers the tensions between a press in transition, an armchair audience in the waning days of exploration, and a body of literary work that made the most of the greyscale and the vertical axis in offering to the reader a moral and emotional landscape.
Garrington, A. (2021). Black, White, and Read All Over: Mines, Mountains, and the Paysage Moralisé of the British Press. In J. Purdon (Ed.), British Literature in Transition, vol. I: 1900-1920 (158-176). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108648714.010
Online Publication Date | Dec 7, 2021 |
---|---|
Publication Date | 2021-12 |
Deposit Date | May 14, 2018 |
Publicly Available Date | Jun 7, 2022 |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 158-176 |
Series Title | British Literature in Transition |
Series Number | 1 |
Book Title | British Literature in Transition, vol. I: 1900-1920. |
Chapter Number | 8 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108648714.010 |
Public URL | https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1636164 |
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This material has been published in British Literature in Transition, vol. I: 1900-1920 edited by J. Purdon, https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108648714.010. This version is free to view and download for private research and study only. Not for re-distribution or re-use.
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