Australian Books and Authors in the American Marketplace 1840s-1940s: Sydney Studies in Australian Literature
Autor Professor David Carter, Dr Roger Osborneen Limba Engleză Paperback – 17 mai 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781743325797
ISBN-10: 1743325797
Pagini: 378
Ilustrații: 27
Dimensiuni: 176 x 250 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: Sydney University Press
Colecția Sydney University Press
Seria Sydney Studies in Australian Literature
ISBN-10: 1743325797
Pagini: 378
Ilustrații: 27
Dimensiuni: 176 x 250 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: Sydney University Press
Colecția Sydney University Press
Seria Sydney Studies in Australian Literature
Recenzii
'This account of American publishing serves as a parallel literary history: of fiction that has become part of our literary canon, and of popular writing that has disappeared from memory. Carter and Osborne quote numerous published reviews and private comments by American publishers that reinforce a sense of the openness, sophistication and perceptiveness of these literary Americans. They place Australian writing in the context of the international development of the novel rather than the conventional local interest in Australianness.' -- Susan Lever -- Inside Story
'The book is chock-full of intriguing facts which could either be vital leads or red herrings depending on the reader's predilections, but which are all tantalising. Their appeal is buttressed by many color and black and white reproductions of book covers and, most intriguingly, advertisements in American papers which are often fascinating documents of cultural evidence.' -- Nicholas Birns -- Southerly
'This is book history par excellence, assured of its breadth and detail of the archive, but rich with the humanity of its makers. Australian Books and Authors is an elegantly told story of the ebbs and flows of a cultural trademark manufactured by the publishing apparatus of America's dominant book industry.' -- Keyvan Allahyari -- Australian Book Review
'David Carter and Roger Osborne have produced a highly readable, deeply interesting and provocative study of the fortunes of Australian literature. If as they argue, 'Australia's place in the world republic of letters needs a new trigonometry,' then their book has provided a powerful mapping of a vital segment of Australian literary history, and one that will provide a new set of coordinates for future researchers.' -- Robert Clarke -- Journal of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature
'The book is chock-full of intriguing facts which could either be vital leads or red herrings depending on the reader's predilections, but which are all tantalising. Their appeal is buttressed by many color and black and white reproductions of book covers and, most intriguingly, advertisements in American papers which are often fascinating documents of cultural evidence.' -- Nicholas Birns -- Southerly
'This is book history par excellence, assured of its breadth and detail of the archive, but rich with the humanity of its makers. Australian Books and Authors is an elegantly told story of the ebbs and flows of a cultural trademark manufactured by the publishing apparatus of America's dominant book industry.' -- Keyvan Allahyari -- Australian Book Review
'David Carter and Roger Osborne have produced a highly readable, deeply interesting and provocative study of the fortunes of Australian literature. If as they argue, 'Australia's place in the world republic of letters needs a new trigonometry,' then their book has provided a powerful mapping of a vital segment of Australian literary history, and one that will provide a new set of coordinates for future researchers.' -- Robert Clarke -- Journal of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature
Cuprins
List of figures
List of plates
Acknowledgements Introduction: the two-sided triangle 1. Antipodean romance: Australian fiction and the American book trade in the 19th century
2. International reputations and transatlantic rights: Rosa Praed and Louis Becke
3. Crime, sensation and the modern genre system: Australian authors in the popular fiction marketplace, 1820s-1920s
4. Renegotiating the American connection: Australian fiction 1900-1930s
5. Mystery and romance: the market for light fiction between the wars
6. Becoming articulate: Henry Handel Richardson and Katharine Susannah Prichard
7. 'Australia is very American': Australian historical fiction in America 1920s-1940s
8. 'Australian moderns': Christina Stead and Patrick White in New York
9. Bestsellers, modest sellers and commercial failures: the postwar years
Epilogue: completing the triangle Works cited
Index
List of plates
Acknowledgements Introduction: the two-sided triangle 1. Antipodean romance: Australian fiction and the American book trade in the 19th century
2. International reputations and transatlantic rights: Rosa Praed and Louis Becke
3. Crime, sensation and the modern genre system: Australian authors in the popular fiction marketplace, 1820s-1920s
4. Renegotiating the American connection: Australian fiction 1900-1930s
5. Mystery and romance: the market for light fiction between the wars
6. Becoming articulate: Henry Handel Richardson and Katharine Susannah Prichard
7. 'Australia is very American': Australian historical fiction in America 1920s-1940s
8. 'Australian moderns': Christina Stead and Patrick White in New York
9. Bestsellers, modest sellers and commercial failures: the postwar years
Epilogue: completing the triangle Works cited
Index
Notă biografică
David Carter is a retired tax accountant. These days he spends his time buying and selling antiques and collectables and one day he may actually make a profit. He also enjoys playing chess and reading. His favourite author is Bernard Cornwell, but he also enjoys many more historical and other writers.He lives near the picturesque Port Noarlunga and Christies Beach in Adelaide, South Australia, and is fortunate to live near one of the best wine regions in the world.