Book
Authors Inc.: literary celebrity in the modern United States, 1880-1980
New York University Press
2004
Abstract
The first comprehensive and systematic study of literary celebrity in the twentieth-century United States, Authors Inc. focuses on the autobiographical work of Mark Twain, Jack London, Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway, and Norman Mailer. Through these classic American authors, Loren Glass reveals the degree to which literary modernism in the United States is inseparable from the mass cultural forces it opposed.
Chronicling the emergence of literary celebrity in the late nineteenth century up through its contemporary manifestations, Glass focuses on how individual authors themselves struggled with the conditions of mass cultural renown. Furthermore, by emphasizing the complex relation between masculinity and modernist authorship in the United States, the book provides a bracing new account of the psychosexual economy of the American profession of authorship.
By combining a socio-historical approach with a rhetorical analysis of the autobiographical work in which classic American writers attempted to intervene in the formation of their public personae, Authors Inc. offers a long overdue study of one of the most important, and neglected, aspects of modern American literature.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Authors Inc.: literary celebrity in the modern United States, 1880-1980
- Creators
- Loren Glass - University of Iowa, English
- Resource Type
- Book
- ISBN
- 1479891827; 9781479891825; 9780814731598; 0814731597; 9780814731604; 0814731600
- eISBN
- 1479891827; 9781479891825
- Publisher
- New York University Press; New York
- Number of pages
- xii, 243 pages
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 2004
- Academic Unit
- English
- Record Identifier
- 9983992599602771
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