Literary Rebels: A History of Creative Writers in Anglo-American Universities
Autor Lise Jaillanten Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 oct 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780192855305
ISBN-10: 0192855301
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 13 Illustrations
Dimensiuni: 165 x 240 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0192855301
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 13 Illustrations
Dimensiuni: 165 x 240 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
A compelling post-45 cultural history; grounded in rich historical research.... What Literary Rebels ultimately exposes—and this may be its most lasting legacy—is the increasing privatization of the humanities and of creative writing in particular, as neoliberal capitalism proves remarkably adept, continuously, at incorporating into itself even the most "outside" of literary rebellions.
Written in accessible language. Well researched, informative and...extremely interesting.
Jaillant expands the frame within which we can understand the rise of creative writing-from a somewhat parochial American story to a broader Anglo-American cultural phenomenon.
Jaillant's research into British creative writing programmes explores new territory.
Literary Rebels is, in the end, a book about desire: the contradictory desires of successful creative writers, the utopian ones of programme founders, the frustrated ones of aspiring novelists with day jobs.
Situated at the cutting edge of book history ...a timely examination of the beginnings of an academic behemoth of a discipline within the growth of the humanities.
Literary Rebels asks intriguing questions and presents extensive research, including a meticulous and impressive works cited section, to point subsequent scholars toward avenues of further exploration of the history of creative writers in Anglo-American universities.
Literary Rebels is a fascinating insight into the long-running creative/critical debates in University English Literature departments and an in-depth examination of the cultural history of creative writing and its institutionalization (or otherwise) in a transatlantic perspective...overall, this is an important and timely book for anyone interested in the past and future of creative writing within and outside of English Literature as a discipline. It will be useful reading on University Management Boards and at the Office for Students.
Literary Rebels is thus a series of fascinating case studies divided into two main sections, one focussing on American writers and one on British writers...Jaillant's "'transatlantic" focus illuminates key figures and provides valuable ways to re-evaluate them.
Literary Rebels, though not without its flaws, is a significant contribution to the scholarly discourses around creative writing. While Jaillant may situate this book squarely within the field of literary study, it can also be read as an entry into the still-emerging and dynamic field of creative writing studies, where scholars and practitioners from a number of other language-related subfields come together to study, debate, and discuss the perennially interesting thing we call (perhaps for lack of a better term) creative writing.
Written in accessible language. Well researched, informative and...extremely interesting.
Jaillant expands the frame within which we can understand the rise of creative writing-from a somewhat parochial American story to a broader Anglo-American cultural phenomenon.
Jaillant's research into British creative writing programmes explores new territory.
Literary Rebels is, in the end, a book about desire: the contradictory desires of successful creative writers, the utopian ones of programme founders, the frustrated ones of aspiring novelists with day jobs.
Situated at the cutting edge of book history ...a timely examination of the beginnings of an academic behemoth of a discipline within the growth of the humanities.
Literary Rebels asks intriguing questions and presents extensive research, including a meticulous and impressive works cited section, to point subsequent scholars toward avenues of further exploration of the history of creative writers in Anglo-American universities.
Literary Rebels is a fascinating insight into the long-running creative/critical debates in University English Literature departments and an in-depth examination of the cultural history of creative writing and its institutionalization (or otherwise) in a transatlantic perspective...overall, this is an important and timely book for anyone interested in the past and future of creative writing within and outside of English Literature as a discipline. It will be useful reading on University Management Boards and at the Office for Students.
Literary Rebels is thus a series of fascinating case studies divided into two main sections, one focussing on American writers and one on British writers...Jaillant's "'transatlantic" focus illuminates key figures and provides valuable ways to re-evaluate them.
Literary Rebels, though not without its flaws, is a significant contribution to the scholarly discourses around creative writing. While Jaillant may situate this book squarely within the field of literary study, it can also be read as an entry into the still-emerging and dynamic field of creative writing studies, where scholars and practitioners from a number of other language-related subfields come together to study, debate, and discuss the perennially interesting thing we call (perhaps for lack of a better term) creative writing.
Notă biografică
Lise Jaillant is Senior Lecturer (Associate Professor) in the School of Social Sciences and Humanities at Loughborough University. She specialises in twentieth-century literary institutions, with a special interest in publishers and creative writing programmes. She is author of Modernism, Middlebrow and the Literary Canon: The Modern Library Series, 1917-1955 (Routledge, 2014) and Cheap Modernism: Expanding Markets, Publishers' Series and the Avant-Garde (EUP, 2017) and editor of Publishing Modernist Fiction and Poetry (EUP, 2019). Taken together, these three books offer a broad overview of Anglo-American publishers in the early-twentieth-century, and their influence on the diffusion of modern literature.