Milton Public Library

Reading, wanting, and broken economics, a twenty-first-century study of readers and bookshops in Southampton around1900, Simon Frost

Label
Reading, wanting, and broken economics, a twenty-first-century study of readers and bookshops in Southampton around1900, Simon Frost
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Reading, wanting, and broken economics
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Simon Frost
Sub title
a twenty-first-century study of readers and bookshops in Southampton around1900
Summary
Uses a historical study of bookselling and readers as a way to question and rethink our understanding of the market for symbolic goods. Combining historical study, theorization, and experimental fiction, this book takes commodity culture and book retail around 1900, as the prime example of a market of symbolic goods. With the port of Southampton, England, as his case study, Simon R. Frost reveals how the city's bookshops, with their combinations of libraries, haberdashery, stationery, and books, sustained and were sustained by the dreams of ordinary readers, and how together they created the values powering this market. The goods in this market were symbolic and were not "consumed" but read. Their readings were created between other readers and texts, in happy disobedience to the neoliberal laws of the free market. Today such reader-created social markets comprise much of the world's branded economies, which is why Frost calls for a new understanding of both literary and market values. Simon R. Frost is Principal Academic in English at Bournemouth University, United Kingdom. He is the author of The Business of the Novel: Economics, Aesthetics and the Case of Middlemarch
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content