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Richard Bentley and the British Empire

Mary Jane Edwards

Imperial and Colonial Publishing Connections in the 19th Century

Richard Bentley (then Richard Bentley and Son) was the leading publisher of fiction in three-volume form for much of the 19th century, and his business traded globally. He was one of the most important publishers in his time. He worked with many of the best-selling British and overseas writers, including publishing much important later fiction in single-volumes.

From 1832 until it was sold to Macmillan in 1898, his London-based firm developed networks to distribute its books throughout the British Empire. It also issued works of fiction and non-fiction about Great Britain’s various colonies in what are now Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand, and South Africa.


The book historians and scholarly editors who have contributed to Richard Bentley and The British Empire: Imperial and Colonial Publishing in the 19th Century analyse fundamental aspects of the structure, history and functioning of the international book trade. They explore the many roles that Bentley played in disseminating information about these far-flung possessions and in helping to develop - and modify - British cultural values in them.


As well as documenting the geography and history of regions in the Empire, the contributors to this volume explore many questions including race relations and slavery, that are still relevant today.



Contents: Editor’s Introduction; Nirmolini Velma Flora, ‘Writing on the Raj: Bentley and British India’; Valerie Letcher, ‘”Opportune as Well as Interesting”: Bentley and South Africa’; Helen Hewson, ‘”The Land of the South”: Bentley and Australasian Travel Writing’; George L. Parker, “That’s Bentley, He is the Only Patron Worth Havin’”: Richard Bentley Meets Sam Slick’; Mary Jane Edwards, ‘”My Dear Mr. Bentley”: Richard Bentley and Susan Strickland Moodie Correspond’; Paul Eggert, ‘Changing Literary Tastes and the Blue Pencil: Bentley’s In-house Revision and Abridgement of Australian Colonial Novels’; Elizabeth Morrison, ‘More than a Case of “Comparative Failure”: The Story Behind the Premature Bentley Ventures of Ada Cambridge’; Chris Tiffin, ‘Fostering a Colonial Author: George Bentley and Rose Praed’; Wallace Kirsop, ‘Selling Books to the Colonials: Advertising and Distributing Bentley Books in 19th-Century Australia’; Lydia Wevers, ‘Bentley in the Brancepath Library: Books, Readers, and Reception’; Elizabeth Webby, ‘Conclusion’; Works Cited; Index.