Description
Collaborative Writing in the Long Nineteenth Century investigates the complex partnerships between authors who worked together during a period of significant literary innovation. Heather Bozant Witcher demonstrates how collaborative practices challenged traditional concepts of individual authorship and creative genius, revealing instead the sympathetic artistic relationships that produced enduring literary works.
This volume examines case studies of famous and lesser-known writing partnerships, exploring how authors negotiated creative differences, shared responsibilities, and contributed to each other’s artistic development. Witcher argues that understanding these collaborations provides essential insights into nineteenth-century literary culture, revealing how writers used partnerships to experiment with form, expand their intellectual reach, and achieve artistic goals that might have been impossible in isolation.
Part of the prestigious Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture series, this work contributes to broader scholarly conversations about authorship, collaboration, and the social dimensions of literary creation in the modern period.







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