<p>'This dedication to the complex network of ideas and lived practice makes Walter Besant more than a mere love letter to a forgotten Victorian. Rather, it provides an integral contribution to the history of publishing and of literary production, and to studies of libralism and reform as they appeared at the end of the century.'<br /> Peter Katz, <em>Victorians Institute Journal</em></p>
<p>‘Kevin A. Morrison’s recent volume of essays, <em>Walter Besant: The Business of Literature and the Pleasures of Reform</em>, offers a timely and important meditation on the restoration of authors who have fallen out of favor or slipped into obscurity… The essays in this volume offer nuanced reflections on Besant’s marginal status, thoughtful speculations about his fall from popularity, and compelling arguments for bringing him back into the Victorian studies.’ Heidi Kaufman, <em>Victorian Studies</em></p>
Introduction
1. Walter Besant Now
Kevin A. Morrison
Part One: Literary Collaborations
2. Besant and Collaboration
Kirsty Bunting
3. ‘Another like me’: The Literary Partnership of Walter Besant and James Rice
Richard Storer
4. ‘I have altered nothing’: Walter Besant’s Completion of Blind Love
Maria K. Bachman and Don Richard Cox
Part Two: Reforming Authorship
5. Walter Besant and Copyright Reform
Mary Ann Gillies
6. The Author Function in Walter Besant’s Fiction: the Notion of Artistic Value in the Wake of Copyright Law and the Nationalist Restructuring of the Trade
Alberto Gabriele
7. Besant, Chatto and Watt: a Literary Income in the 1890s
Simon Eliot
8. Workers as Artists: From Copyright to the Palace of Delight in Besant’s Writings
Ayşe Çelikkol
Part Three: Authoring Reforms
9. Altruism and The Monks of Thelema: Ideals and Realities
Geoffrey A.C. Ginn
10. The Ethics of Perception and the Politics of Recognition: Walter Besant’s All Sorts and Conditions of Men
Kevin Swafford
11. From Happy Individuals to Universal Sisterhood: Affective Reforms in All Sorts and Conditions of Men and Children of Gibeon
Vicky Cheng and Haejoo Kim
Part Four: Literary Relations
12. Moral Perfectionism, Optatives, and the Inky Line in Besant’s All in a Garden Fair and Gissing’s New Grub Street
Tom Ue
13. Walter Besant: A Latter-Day Dickens?
Andrzej Diniejko