Abstract
Since its incorporation in Buenos Aires in the mid-1840s, the serial story format (feuilleton) completely integrated to the press sector. Such integration was not passive; on the contrary, it caused several important events in the emergent and precarious printing market. On the one hand, it acknowledged and negotiated with what had not been a sufficiently considered area until then: the entertainment culture; on the other hand, the progressive “serialization” of the press achieved its full development with the propagation of printed images. Furthermore, the alliance between serial works of fiction and illustration generated a popular type of reading that became a true novelty in the Republic of Letters. This paper aims to study the history of these relations, from incorporating the genre in Buenos Aires (1846) to its most artistic form– the serial criollos feuilletons written by Eduardo Gutiérrez and published in La Patria Argentina (1879-1880).
Authors who publish in Bibliographica automatically accept the following terms:
a. Authors will keep their authorship rights and will guarantee the journal the first time publication rights of their submitted work, which will be liable to a Creative Commons license that will allow third parties to share their work as long as they give appropriate credit to the author and the first publication is attributed to Bibliographica, it is not used for commercial purposes and modified material is not distributed in case of remix, transformation or recreation.
b. Authors can adopt other non-exclusive distribution license agreements of the published version of the work (for example: deposit it in an institutional telematic archive or publish it in a monographic volume) as long as the first publication is attributed to Bibliographica.
c. Authors are encouraged to self-archive their work (for example: in institutional telematic archives or their website), for this can promote interesting exchanges and increase the citation impact of the published work. (See The effect of open access).