Series
Volume 33
Spektrum: Publications of the German Studies Association
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Agency and Author
German Literature Beyond the Bestseller List
Edited by Rachel J. Halverson and Benjamin D. Schaper
250 pages, 14 ills., bibliog., index
ISBN 978-1-80539-801-1 $135.00/£99.00 / Hb / Not Yet Published (January 2025)
eISBN 978-1-80539-802-8 eBook Not Yet Published
Description
The image of the solitary author devoting days and nights to writing endless bestselling novels remains an insidious and largely unchallenged myth within German culture. In this exacting examination of the German publishing industry, Agency and Author addresses the financial reality sometimes eclipsed by this idea. Focusing on lesser-known German-language writers and their interactions with the Literaturbetrieb (“literary scene”), Agency and Author explores the ways authors assert creative agency in an increasingly ‘eventized’ literary marketplace. Ranging from the impacts of literary awards to media hate campaigns, this volume spotlights how profoundly the German literary landscape and our understanding of authorship is transforming.
Rachel J. Halverson is Professor of German and Director of the School of Global Studies at the University of Idaho. A specialist in post-war and post-unification German literature and culture, she has published research on the Historikerstreit, as well as the works of Siegfried Lenz, Jurek Becker, Günter de Bruyn, and Martina Hefter, among others. In addition to journal articles and book chapters, she has co-edited three anthologies: Textual Responses to German Unification (2001) and Berlin: The Symphony Continues (2004), with Carol Anne Costabile-Heming and Kristie Foell; and Taking Stock of German Studies in the United States: The New Millennium (2015), with Costabile-Heming.
Benjamin D. Schaper is an Independent Scholar, who has taught at the universities of Munich, Durham, and Oxford. A former Sylvia Nash Visiting Fellow at the Institute of Languages, Cultures, and Societies at the University of London, he has published widely on twentieth and twenty-first century Germanophone literature, film, and television. His recent publications include his monograph, Poetik und Politik der Lesbarkeit in der deutschen Literatur (2017), the special issue The Lonely Nerd (2022), and the volume Entertaining German Culture: Contemporary Transnational Television and Film (2023).