ISBN-13: 9783565252640 / Angielski / Miękka / 264 str.
Certain books transcended literary achievement to become catalysts for intellectual revolutions, political movements, and cultural transformations. This exploration examines works that fundamentally altered how societies understood themselves, using publication records, reception histories, and contemporary responses to reconstruct how texts achieved influence beyond their pages.From Cervantes' challenge to chivalric ideals to Harriet Beecher Stowe's impact on abolitionism, from Darwin's disruption of religious certainty to Orwell's warnings about totalitarianism, discover how specific works entered public consciousness at moments when societies were receptive to their messages. Examine the contexts that enabled influence-technological advances in printing and distribution, rising literacy rates, political crises that created audiences for new ideas, translation networks that carried texts across linguistic boundaries.Documentary evidence-censorship records, reader correspondence, critical reviews, sales figures, legal proceedings-reveals how authorities recognized these works' subversive potential while readers embraced their challenges to conventional wisdom. Contemporary responses show how the same text provoked drastically different reactions depending on readers' positions within existing power structures.Each case study analyzes factors beyond literary merit that enabled influence. Understand how timing intersected with content, how controversial reception amplified visibility, how educational systems canonized texts, and how political movements appropriated works for purposes authors never intended, demonstrating that a book's impact depends on readers' contexts as much as writers' intentions.
Uncle Tom's Cabin sold 300,000 copies in its first year-not because of literary innovation but because it transformed abstract abolitionist arguments into emotional narratives.