Leslie Stephen's Life in Letters

Leslie Stephen's Life in Letters A Bibliographical Study

Hardback (22 Jul 1993)

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Publisher's Synopsis

In the forty years after he left Cambridge in 1864, Leslie Stephen (1832-1904) published thirty volumes of his own writings and contributed to another twenty books. He wrote literally hundreds of articles for British and American magazines and worked as editor of The Cornhill Magazine and of Alpine Journal as well as the Dictionary of National Biography. By any standards his literary career was successful, epitomising the life of the Victorian man of letters. But he was never completely satisfied with his endeavours. He remained self-effacing, adopting the pose of an amateur in a field in which, in fact, he was a superb professional; asking, 'Will not the twentieth century laugh at the nineteenth?' Contrary to his expectations, Leslie Stephen has not been relegated to the learned footnotes, as contemporary Victorian scholarship and Bloomsbury studies prove. - - This bibliography is an account of Leslie Stephen's entire writing and publishing career, based on the author's detailed research into his books and articles as well as unpublished, and in many cases, uncatalogued, autograph material in British and American libraries, museums and publishers' archives. Emphasis is on the composition, publication history and evolution of the works, including new editions and reissues of his books during Leslie Stephen's lifetime.

Book information

ISBN: 9780859679121
Publisher: Ashgate
Imprint: Scolar
Pub date:
DEWEY: 192
DEWEY edition: 20
Language: English
Number of pages: 436
Weight: 780g
Height: 165mm
Width: 239mm
Spine width: 31mm