In this elegantly conceived book, MeganWalsh argues that illustration constitutes a crucial paratext in the literature of the earlyrepublic, influencing early American writing asmuch, and sometimes more, by its absence than by its presence.The Portrait and the Bookshows howimages undergird American literature in surprising and surprisingly earlyways, before lithography, daguerreotypes, andphotography. --Patricia Crain, author, Reading Children: Literacy, Property, and the Dilemmas of Childhood in Nineteenth-Century America"
Countering a long-held assumption that the early national period was one of graphic poverty, a low point from which to measure the dramatic rise of illustrated books in the middle decades of the nineteenth century, Walsh taps a diverse archive of verbal and visual materials in order to generate a new perspective on the imaginations of early Americans. --Eric Slauter, University of Chicago"
"In this elegantly conceived book, Megan Walsh argues that illustration constitutes a crucial paratext in the literature of the early republic, influencing early American writing as much, and sometimes more, by its absence than by its presence. The Portrait and the Book shows how images undergird American literature in surprising and surprisingly early ways, before lithography, daguerreotypes, and photography."--Patricia Crain, author, Reading Children: Literacy, Property, and the Dilemmas of Childhood in Nineteenth-Century America
"Countering a long-held assumption that the early national period was one of graphic poverty, a low point from which to measure the dramatic rise of illustrated books in the middle decades of the nineteenth century, Walsh taps a diverse archive of verbal and visual materials in order to generate a new perspective on the imaginations of early Americans."--Eric Slauter, University of Chicago