John Murray Archive, 1820s-1840s: (re)establishing the house identity
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Banks, Kirsten Francesca
Abstract
This thesis examines the continuing growth of the House of Murray during the
1820s-1840s. Prior to the 1820s, Murray had enjoyed massive success with the
publications of the work of Lord Byron, whose celebrity, and the profits generated,
contributed significantly to the House’s prestigious reputation. Murray’s move from
Fleet Street to Albemarle Street in 1812 also signified the House’s shift from
bookselling to publishing, which enabled Murray to attract an increasing number of
high-profile names from the worlds of literature, travel and exploration, the sciences,
and politics. Murray’s drawing-room at Albemarle Street became renowned
throughout the trade for its gentlemanly gatherings, comprising of the luminaries of
the day.
The four chapters of this thesis explore how Murray (re)established the House
identity in different markets during the 1820s-1840s, as the Romantic epoch diffused
into an increasingly commercialised era, with new production methods, an expanding
marketplace, and increasing competition.
Chapter One considers Murray’s use of the drawing room at Albemarle Street
to construct a House identity amongst selected members of his inner circle. It also
looks at the importance of the Byronic legacy to the House and the means by which
Murray sought to protect it.
Chapter Two engages with the contrasting side of the House, namely the
‘cheap’ publications, which Murray published in response to the growth of this
market in the late-1820s and early-1830s. During this time Murray used some of his
well-established assets, such as Byron, Crabbe and the Quarterly Review, to retain
the prestige of the House, while attempting to reach new readers within the
burgeoning middle class.
Chapter Three examines Murray’s correspondence with some of his female
authors to consider how the House responded to authors of both genders, and, with
reference to ongoing scholarship regarding ‘women’s writing’, questions the veracity
of a gender-centric approach when applied to the study of archival materials; the
chapter’s findings suggest that both Murray’s male and female authors were treated
similarly.
The final chapter explores how Murray strove to retain control over the
House’s reputation as international trading possibilities developed. The roots of the
'Handbooks' and the 'Colonial and Home Library' are also traced back further than
has previously been considered, and read within the context of the ongoing re-branding
of Byron discussed in Chapters One and Two. The House’s literary figures,
and the Quarterly Review, were used by Murray in the 1840s to promote the values
and prestige of the House in America, Europe and the Colonies.
This thesis offers much previously unpublished archival material from the
John Murray Archive at the National Library of Scotland. It builds upon previous
scholarship on John Murray and seeks to contextualise some of these lines of enquiry
through providing a sustained study of the House during the 1820s-1840s. It uses
quantitative analysis, where possible, to provide further grounding for some of its
claims, and situates the findings within the growing body of research in this area. It is
the underlying aim of this thesis to foreground the House’s shift from the
‘Romanticism’ of the early-nineteenth century towards the ‘commercialism’ of the
mid-nineteenth century, whilst serving as a point of reference for further scholarship
on the John Murray Archive during this time period.
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