Robert Louis Stevenson, Literary Networks and Transatlantic Publishing in the 1890s

The Author Incorporated

Robert Louis Stevenson, Literary Networks and Transatlantic Publishing in the 1890s
Glenda Norquay
RRP:
NZ$ 210.00
Our Price:
NZ$ 178.50
Hardback
h229 x 153mm - 242pg
31 Jan 2020 UK
International import eta 7-19 days
9781785272844
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An investigation of R. L. Stevenson and the geographies of his literary networksFocusing on an author characterised by geographical and aesthetic mobility, and on those who worked with him or wrote for him, Robert Louis Stevenson, Literary Networks and Transatlantic Publishing in the 1890s investigates the operations of transatlantic literary networks during a period of key changes in transatlantic publishing through a series of critical case studies.'A groundbreaking account of transatlantic publishing and reputation in the 1890s focusing on the uniquely talented, uniquely peripatetic property known as Robert Louis Stevenson, enmeshed in a network of agents, mentors, friends, fans and gatekeepers. Norquay's invaluable study explores the 'incorporation' of the modern author under new concepts of authorship, ownership and commercial competition.' - Roderick Watson, Professor Emeritus, University of Stirling, UK'Glenda Norquay tells a story as surprising and absorbing as any tale of adventure created by Robert Louis Stevenson himself. In her hands, scholarship on late-Victorian publishing history comes to life as a narrative about obsessive love, greedy self-interest, legal machinations, and high-minded dedication to Art (with a capital 'A'), all focused on the works that RLS left behind at the time of his premature death. [...] This volume offers new points of origin for everything from modern marketing strategies to popular notions of celebrity authorship and fandom. At the same time, the thread running so invitingly throughout is Norquay's own deep appreciation of RLS and her ability to reawaken interest in novels of his that have wrongly been neglected.' - Margaret D. Stetz, Mae and Robert Carter Professor of Women's Studies and Professor of Humanities, Department of Women & Gender Studies, University of Delaware, USA
'A groundbreaking account of transatlantic publishing and reputation in the 1890s focusing on the uniquely talented, uniquely peripatetic property known as Robert Louis Stevenson, enmeshed in a network of agents, mentors, friends, fans and gatekeepers. Norquay's invaluable study explores the "incorporation" of the modern author under new concepts of authorship, ownership and commercial competition.' -Roderick Watson, Professor Emeritus, University of Stirling, UK'Glenda Norquay tells a story as surprising and absorbing as any tale of adventure created by Robert Louis Stevenson himself. In her hands, scholarship on late-Victorian publishing history comes to life as a narrative about obsessive love, greedy self-interest, legal machinations, and high-minded dedication to Art (with a capital "A"), all focused on the works that RLS left behind at the time of his premature death. [...] This volume offers new points of origin for everything from modern marketing strategies to popular notions of celebrity authorship and fandom. At the same time, the thread running so invitingly throughout is Norquay's own deep appreciation of RLS and her ability to reawaken interest in novels of his that have wrongly been neglected.'-Margaret D. Stetz, Mae and Robert Carter Professor of Women's Studies and Professor of Humanities, Department of Women & Gender Studies, University of Delaware, USA
Glenda Norquay is chair in Scottish Literary Studies at Liverpool John Moores University, UK, and head of its Research Institute for Literature and Cultural History. With interests in Robert Louis Stevenson, Scottish literature more generally, women's fiction and literary reception/production, she is the author of Robert Louis Stevenson and Theories of Reading (2007); editor of the Edinburgh Companion to Scottish Women's Writing (2012); and co-editor of a volume on archipelagic cultural politics, Across the Margins (2002). Norquay has also written extensively on Scottish women's fiction and on the politics of suffrage literature.

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