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11: Willibald Alexis offers readers topics for conversation about present-day Berlin (1831, 1838)
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Figures xi
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Note on Translations xiv
- Introduction 1
-
Part I New Beginnings: Journalistic Programs
- 1: J. F. Cotta recruits Jean Paul to contribute to the inaugural issue of a new belletristic journal and Jean Paul offers readers a vision of its end (1807) 31
- 2: The Berlin Evening Pages takes to the stage of Berlin publishing (1810) 42
- 3: Joseph von Görres exhorts the German press to cultivate an independent spirit (1814) 53
- 4: Lorenz Oken evaluates the current situation of scientific review journals in Isis or Encyclopedic Journal (1818) 62
- 5: Ludwig Börne elaborates his vision for a public sphere where nothing is off limits (1818) 72
- 6: Johann Peter Hebel returns to editing his yearly calendar after a four-year absence (1819) 86
-
Part II Editing, Criticism, and the Business of Journal Literature
- 7: Helmine von Chézy reports from Napoleonic France and highlights the achievements of women writers (1803, 1805, 1820) 95
- 8: F. A. Brockhaus surveys the market for yearly anthologies in his Conversations-Lexicon and advertises his own print products in the process (1820) 104
- 9: The Polytechnic Journal advertises new high-speed printing technology for the uneven German print market (1826) 120
- 10: Wilhelm Hauff picks apart contemporary belletristic journals (1827) 128
- 11: Willibald Alexis offers readers topics for conversation about present-day Berlin (1831, 1838) 142
- 12: In his satirical entertainment journal Berliner Don Quixote, Adolf Glaßbrenner digs graves for journals and anticipates the burial of his own (1832–1833) 155
- 13: The publishers Carl Joseph Meyer and Philipp Jakob Siebenpfeiffer attempt different journal projects in the face of censorship 173
- 14: Ernst Keil founds the revolutionary journal The Lighthouse before turning to the less political format of the domestic journal The Garden Arbor (1846, 1853) 184
- 15: Karl Gutzkow skeptically evaluates contemporary illustrated journal literature (1834) 195
- 16: Heinrich von Kleist’s Berlin Evening Pages anticipates the journalistic applications of telegraphy almost forty years before the technology is introduced for the first time in German newspaper publishing (1810) 207
-
Part III Journalism as Cross-Cultural Communication
- 17: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe insists on journals’ role in the development of world literature (1828) 223
- 18: Therese Huber leaves her mark on the Morning Pages for the Educated Classes as editor and contributor (1817) 230
- 19: August Lewald and Gustav Kühne introduce European society to Germany in Europe, Chronicle of the Educated World (1838–1846) 242
- 20: From Parisian exile, Arnold Ruge sees the future of political discourse in journals rather than books (1844) 254
- 21: Heinrich Börnstein publishes a new journal in Paris for German émigrés (1843) 264
-
Part IV Journalism Under Censorship and Political Emancipation
- 22: The German Confederation, and then the Grand Duchy of Baden, pass press laws of differing liberality (1819 and 1831) 281
- 23: From beyond the grave, August von Kotzebue writes letters to the editor of the Literary Weekly critiquing censorship (1820) 294
- 24: Karl Gutzkow, banned from publishing in Prussia, considers a practical approach to censorship (1837) 304
- 25: Ludwig Philippson introduces his new newspaper as an impartial organ for all Jewish interests (1837) 316
- 26: Louise Aston asserts her “free personality” against the Berlin press (1846) 331
-
Part V Journalism as History and the History of Journalism
- 27: Heinrich Heine begins, and abruptly abandons, a historical writing project on the origin of the French Revolution (1832) 345
- 28: A new works edition presents Friedrich von Gentz, a figurehead of the Restoration establishment, as a classic German journalist-author (1832) 360
- 29: Heinrich Heine eulogizes the German- Jewish writer Ludwig Marcus and the Society for Jewish Culture and Jewish Studies (1844) 373
- 30: Robert Prutz begins his history of German journalism in search of “the most obscured veins of our times” (1845) 384
- 31: Heinrich Börnstein looks back on a journalistic career in Europe and North America (1881) 400
- Notes on Contributors 407
- Index 409
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Figures xi
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Note on Translations xiv
- Introduction 1
-
Part I New Beginnings: Journalistic Programs
- 1: J. F. Cotta recruits Jean Paul to contribute to the inaugural issue of a new belletristic journal and Jean Paul offers readers a vision of its end (1807) 31
- 2: The Berlin Evening Pages takes to the stage of Berlin publishing (1810) 42
- 3: Joseph von Görres exhorts the German press to cultivate an independent spirit (1814) 53
- 4: Lorenz Oken evaluates the current situation of scientific review journals in Isis or Encyclopedic Journal (1818) 62
- 5: Ludwig Börne elaborates his vision for a public sphere where nothing is off limits (1818) 72
- 6: Johann Peter Hebel returns to editing his yearly calendar after a four-year absence (1819) 86
-
Part II Editing, Criticism, and the Business of Journal Literature
- 7: Helmine von Chézy reports from Napoleonic France and highlights the achievements of women writers (1803, 1805, 1820) 95
- 8: F. A. Brockhaus surveys the market for yearly anthologies in his Conversations-Lexicon and advertises his own print products in the process (1820) 104
- 9: The Polytechnic Journal advertises new high-speed printing technology for the uneven German print market (1826) 120
- 10: Wilhelm Hauff picks apart contemporary belletristic journals (1827) 128
- 11: Willibald Alexis offers readers topics for conversation about present-day Berlin (1831, 1838) 142
- 12: In his satirical entertainment journal Berliner Don Quixote, Adolf Glaßbrenner digs graves for journals and anticipates the burial of his own (1832–1833) 155
- 13: The publishers Carl Joseph Meyer and Philipp Jakob Siebenpfeiffer attempt different journal projects in the face of censorship 173
- 14: Ernst Keil founds the revolutionary journal The Lighthouse before turning to the less political format of the domestic journal The Garden Arbor (1846, 1853) 184
- 15: Karl Gutzkow skeptically evaluates contemporary illustrated journal literature (1834) 195
- 16: Heinrich von Kleist’s Berlin Evening Pages anticipates the journalistic applications of telegraphy almost forty years before the technology is introduced for the first time in German newspaper publishing (1810) 207
-
Part III Journalism as Cross-Cultural Communication
- 17: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe insists on journals’ role in the development of world literature (1828) 223
- 18: Therese Huber leaves her mark on the Morning Pages for the Educated Classes as editor and contributor (1817) 230
- 19: August Lewald and Gustav Kühne introduce European society to Germany in Europe, Chronicle of the Educated World (1838–1846) 242
- 20: From Parisian exile, Arnold Ruge sees the future of political discourse in journals rather than books (1844) 254
- 21: Heinrich Börnstein publishes a new journal in Paris for German émigrés (1843) 264
-
Part IV Journalism Under Censorship and Political Emancipation
- 22: The German Confederation, and then the Grand Duchy of Baden, pass press laws of differing liberality (1819 and 1831) 281
- 23: From beyond the grave, August von Kotzebue writes letters to the editor of the Literary Weekly critiquing censorship (1820) 294
- 24: Karl Gutzkow, banned from publishing in Prussia, considers a practical approach to censorship (1837) 304
- 25: Ludwig Philippson introduces his new newspaper as an impartial organ for all Jewish interests (1837) 316
- 26: Louise Aston asserts her “free personality” against the Berlin press (1846) 331
-
Part V Journalism as History and the History of Journalism
- 27: Heinrich Heine begins, and abruptly abandons, a historical writing project on the origin of the French Revolution (1832) 345
- 28: A new works edition presents Friedrich von Gentz, a figurehead of the Restoration establishment, as a classic German journalist-author (1832) 360
- 29: Heinrich Heine eulogizes the German- Jewish writer Ludwig Marcus and the Society for Jewish Culture and Jewish Studies (1844) 373
- 30: Robert Prutz begins his history of German journalism in search of “the most obscured veins of our times” (1845) 384
- 31: Heinrich Börnstein looks back on a journalistic career in Europe and North America (1881) 400
- Notes on Contributors 407
- Index 409