2013
DOI: 10.2979/victorianstudies.55.2.212
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The Medium is the Media: Fictions of the Telephone in the 1890s

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Cited by 11 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…67 Richard Menke has argued that due to the slower adoption of the telephone in daily life in Britain compared to elsewhere, the telephone is less of a feature in late nineteenth-century British fiction. 68 However, by the early twentieth century, telephonists were beginning to feature in novels, either as minor characters or cameos or more fully. In E. F. Benson's 1914 novel Dodo's Daughter, Dodo is fascinated by the workings of the telephone and the lives of telephonists.…”
Section: The Telephonist In Fictionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…67 Richard Menke has argued that due to the slower adoption of the telephone in daily life in Britain compared to elsewhere, the telephone is less of a feature in late nineteenth-century British fiction. 68 However, by the early twentieth century, telephonists were beginning to feature in novels, either as minor characters or cameos or more fully. In E. F. Benson's 1914 novel Dodo's Daughter, Dodo is fascinated by the workings of the telephone and the lives of telephonists.…”
Section: The Telephonist In Fictionmentioning
confidence: 99%