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BRITISH
FICTION,
18001829:
A DATABASE OF
PRODUCTION AND
RECEPTION,
PHASE II REPORT
(FEBNOV
2000) AND CIRCULATING-LIBRARY
CHECKLIST
Jacqueline Belanger,
Peter Garside, Anthony Mandal
[Visitors
can also access a downloadable version of this report and the
checklist in one file from our Project
Downloads section.]
The second stage of our Database of Fiction 1800–29
project is focused towards the acquisition of contemporary materials
which will provide a more comprehensive context for the primary
bibliographical data already available. Since her appointment
as Research Associate to the project in February 2000, Dr Jacqueline
Belanger has been directing her research towards two significant
aspects of the early nineteenth-century fiction marketplace:
circulating-library catalogues and periodical reviews. At the
moment, we are transferring and refining this material into
electronic format before processing it in the database at a
future time, when a fuller range of these materials has been
gathered.
I. CIRCULATING-LIBRARY
CATALOGUES
As an initial
exercise in the current phase of the project, information from
the catalogues of major circulating libraries has now been processed
into electronic form. The project has now recorded data from
the following library catalogues: Samuel Bettison’s Library
(Cheltenham), Robert Kinnear’s Circulating Library (Edinburgh),
A. K. Newman’s Library (London), and the Manchester Subscription
Library. Approximately 1,750 titles—around 77% of novels from
the period 1800–29—are listed in the circulating library catalogues
analysed thus far. These four particular catalogues were chosen
not only for their comprehensiveness, but also in order to provide
an overview of different regional patterns and full coverage
of the period 1800–29.
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Newman’s Circulating Library (London),
covering the years 1800–16, comprises one of the most extensive
library catalogues during the early part of the nineteenth
century. 1,137 titles in Newman’s circulating-library catalogue
have been processed and are ready for entering into the
database at a future time. This figure represents 91.5%
of all new novels for 1800–16, a figure that surpasses the
Corvey Library in its inclusiveness.
For this period, Newman’s
library holds all of those titles published by the Minerva
Press, which themselves represent 26% of total fiction held
in the catalogue. Of the other principal publishers from
this period, Longmans (8.5%) and J. F. Hughes (9%) comprise
major components in the collectionin both cases, Newman’s
Circulating Library holds nearly all the titles brought
out by Longmans and Hughes.
This is one of the most extensive
circulating library catalogues for this period, and as such
represents a major step in the continuing development of
the database, as researchers will be able to see, for example,
what novels were held in Newman’s library, what proportion
of novels published by other publishers were held in the
library, title variations, and possibly if multiple copies
of a particular work were held, thus pointing to the popularity
of a given title.
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Kinnear’s Library (Edinburgh) was
based in the New Town area the city and extends from 1800
to 1825, thus providing information on what novels were
being read by fashionable Edinburgh readers during the first
quarter of the century. A total of 1,060 fiction titles
are held in the Kinnear Library for 1800–25, nearly 55%
of all such works published during the period. For the period
covered by the main Kinnear catalogue to 1808, 441 titles
are held (nearly 64%) compared with 630 for Newman (91%).
In the appendix and addenda
to Kinnear’s main catalogue, often where the author’s name
is given on the title page, the catalogue uses the format
of ‘by the author of…’ rather than providing the author’s
name. This perhaps indicates that this is a title-driven
catalogue, one that attempts to interest readers in a particular
novel on the strength of the success of earlier titles.
In some cases, the ‘by the author of…’ information is not
actually on the title page (as given in the bibliography),
thus indicating that this information must have been supplied
by the compiler of the catalogue or by the title pages of
later editions. In the manuscript entries, no author names
are provided.
While Newman was still drawing
from pre-1800 titles in the appendices to the main catalogue—thus
indicating that a general, comprehensive library was being
built up—Kinnear appendices indicate that only new, contemporary
titles were being acquired. The sole exception to this is
Vaughan’s Fashionable Follies (1781)—it is possible
that this is a new edition or a reissue.
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Bettison’s Circulating Library (Cheltenham)
was located in the fashionable spa resort of Cheltenham,
and its catalogue extends to 1831. So far, data has only
been entered from the ‘Additions’ catalogue which was already
held in the Centre, although a recent trip to Cheltenham
has enabled us to acquire a copy of the main catalogue itself.
There are a total of 995 titles held in Bettison’s circulating
library for the period 1800–29. This represents approximately
44% of known novels for this period. (Compare with Newman’s
Circulating Library in London, containing 1,137 titles for
1800–16 and with Kinnear’s Library in Edinburgh, comprising
1,060 titles for 1800–25).
Unlike Kinnear, Bettison did
take pre-1800 fiction, although the focus of acquisition
was still very much on contemporary titles. When the collection
is analysed in terms of decades, it becomes obvious how
heavily weighted the library was in favour of newer titles:
for 1800–9, only 46 novels are listed in Bettison’s ‘Additions’
(approx. 6% of all titles); for 1810–19, 174 titles are
held (26%); however, for 1820–9, 410 novels are held (almost
50%), indicative of a dramatic rise in acquisitions.
Bettison’s library also contained
a large number of travel narratives (based on a cursory
overview, the second-largest category of titles after fiction),
as well as histories, poetry, memoirs, moral and religious
tracts, reference works, and periodicals such as the American
Museum, or Universal Magazine; Asiatic Journal, and
Monthly Register for British India and Its Dependencies;
Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine; the New Monthly
Magazine; and the Sporting Magazine, or Monthly Calendar.
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Manchester Subscription
Library consists of two catalogues: one catalogue for
1818 (identified as MANS in short title list), which lists
138 novels for 1800–18. Indications of popularity of novels
given in notations that two sets of certain novels are held
(such as D’Arblay’s Wanderer, Surr’s Winter in London,
Scott’s Tales of My Landlord, The Antiquary,
Guy Mannering).
The Catalogue for 1831 (identified
as MANS1 in short title list) lists 267 new novel titles.
Most of the earlier novels from the 1818 catalogue are retained
in the 1831 catalogue, and most of the new titles given in
the 1831 catalogue are post-1820 publications, although there
are some pre-1820 titles listed as well that were not listed
in the 1818 catalogue. For the 1831 catalogue, 19 titles are
listed as having two sets in the library, again indicating
popularity. Of these instances where two copies are held,
most are by Walter Scott.
The total number of novels from
the period 1800–29 in Manchester Subscription Library is 405
(18%). There are 72 titles held in the Manchester Subscription
Library that are not held in any other library examined so
far (Newman, Bettison, Kinnear). 66 of these are in the 1831
catalogue—this is not necessarily an indication that the Manchester
Subscription Library is taking more obscure or unpopular titles
than the other libraries, but that the other libraries do
not have have as great a concentration of 1820s titles as
the 1831 Manchester catalogue. 
The project has therefore gathered and processed
information covering libraries from London, Scotland, a fashionable
resort, and an industrial town, and the data from these catalogues
covers the entire span of novels produced from 1800 to 1829.
The completion of such research represents a significant step
in the continuing development of the database, as researchers
will be able to see e.g. which novels were held in Newman’s
library, what proportion of novels published by other concerns
were held in this library, title variations, and possibly if
multiple copies of a particularly work were held, thus pointing
to the popularity of a given title. It will also now be possible
to compare the holdings of different libraries in order to examine
any regional differences: e.g. if Kinnear’s library displays
a preference for Scottish fiction and/or publishers. Some initial
conclusions about the popularity of specific titles may also
begin to be drawn from such a resource.
The next step will
be the input and analysis of matter from the catalogues of library
societies (to complement the commercial circulating libraries
detailed above) and Mechanics’ Institutes, already begun with
the Manchester Subscription Library. Preparation has begun on
acquiring catalogues from circulating libraries in provincial
towns such as Norwich and Canterbury, as well as catalogues
from libraries in Irish towns and cities, such as Belfast, Cork,
and Dublin (currently the Tyrell Circulating-Library (Dublin)
catalogue is being processed).
II. COLLECTION
OF PERIODICAL
REVIEWS
Reviews and notices for the entire period 1800–29
have now been acquired from the Anti-Jacobin Review,
British Critic, British Review, and Blackwood’s
Edinburgh Magazine, as well as from smaller periodicals
such as the Belfast Monthly Magazine. Similar material
from the Critical Review is currently in the process
of being collected. Thus far, in excess 1,000 book reviews have
been collected, stored, and catalogued for the database project,
both as a matter of policy and through copies held by various
members of the Centre. Where the review or notice is relatively
brief, the entirety of the review/notice will be processed;
if longer, apposite extracts and summaries of the tenor of the
article will be entered. It is anticipated that within the next
months, complete runs of the Annual Register, Christian
Observer, Edinburgh Review, Literary Gazette,
and Quarterly Review will have been examined for the
relevant reviews and notices, thereby creating one of the largest
sources of review information on novels of this period.
III. COLLECTION
OF ANECDOTALINTERTEXTUAL
MATERIAL
To complement our acquisition of contemporary responses
to new fiction from 1800–29 in the form of periodical reviews,
we are also collecting as much anecdotal and intertextual comments
on novels from a variety of sources. Professor Peter Garside
is responsible for the gathering of this data, and so far material
from writers such as Austen, Burney, and Byron, as well as mention
of other works in novels of the period has been collected.
IV. PUBLISHERS
RECORDS:
LONGMAN
ARCHIVES
Preliminary examination of Longmans’ Impression Books—acquired
early in 2000 by the Centre for Editorial and Intertextual Research—has
enabled a close analysis of print runs of various editions,
author payments, etc., which has just been completed. As well
as representative of respectable, middle-of-the-road fiction
Longmans published approximately 8.7% of all new titles for
1800–29, making them the second most prolific publishing concern
after Minerva (23%). The next stage of this branch of research
will be to examine the Longmans Divide Ledgers to gather a clearer
picture of the costs and profits of novel publication during
the Romantic era.
Click on the link to open the circulating-library
catalogue checklist (print-optimised, 264KiB).

Last modified
31 December, 2001
.
This document is maintained by Anthony
Mandal (Mandal@cf.ac.uk).
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