"The pleasure of writing is inconceivable": William Hutton (1723-1815) as an Author

Authors

  • Susan Whyman Royal Historical Society

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v4i1.1107

Keywords:

William Hutton, cultural identity, authorship

Abstract

William Hutton started life as a child labourer, but rose to become a bookseller, stationer, and wealthy paper merchant. Like many autodidacts, he longed to be an author and published 15 popular books. This article examines Hutton’s remarks on ‘writing’, which reveal his motives, methods, and goals of authorship. It also gauges his impact on the literary marketplace by analysing 65 periodical reviews of his works. Hutton’s books were based on personal experience, and mixed memoir and biography with historical, topographical, and travel writing. They suited the nation’s thirst for entertaining formats and established him as a new kind of writer, who produced lively, unlearned books for a commercial age. Hutton’s breach of polite norms and opinionated style horrified the literary establishment. But they also attracted readers lower down the social scale, who enjoyed irreverent views on political, religious, economic, and social issues. Hutton thus had an impact on two contrasting groups of readers and put Birmingham and northern regions on the national literary map. Together this author and his critics offer a portrait of the evolution of authorship, the spread of knowledge and taste, and the creation of cultural identity in a time of literary change.

Author Biography

Susan Whyman, Royal Historical Society

Susan Whyman holds M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Princeton University, a Masters in Library Science fom Rutgers University, and is a fellow of the Royal Historical Society. She is the author of The Pen and the People: English Letter Writers, which won the Modern Language Association prize in 2010; Sociability and Power: The Cultural Worlds of the Verneys; and co-editor of Walking the Streets of Eighteenth-Century London published by Oxford University Press. Her current project is about the industrial revolution and provincial enlightenment as seen through the eyes of William Hutton of Birmingham.

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Published

2015-06-17

How to Cite

Whyman, S. (2015). "The pleasure of writing is inconceivable": William Hutton (1723-1815) as an Author. uthorship, 4(1). https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v4i1.1107

Issue

Section

Special Topic: Between Geniuses and Brain-Suckers. Problematic Professionalism in Eighteenth-Century Authorship