作为社会产品的作者

IF 0.5 2区 文学 0 LITERATURE
Sarah Brouillette
{"title":"作为社会产品的作者","authors":"Sarah Brouillette","doi":"10.1353/sdn.2024.a921061","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> The Author As Social Production <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Sarah Brouillette </li> </ul> SINYKIN, DAN. <em>Big Fiction: How Conglomeration Changed the Publishing Industry and American Literature</em>. New York: Columbia University Press, 2023. 328 pp. Paperback $30.00; hardcover $120.00; e-book $29.99. SAPIRO, GISÈLE. <em>The Sociology of Literature</em>. Trans. Madeline Bedecarré and Ben Libman. Stanford: University of Stanford Press, 2023. 212 pp. Paperback $25.00; hardcover $100.00. <h2>1. Superorganism</h2> <p>The general claim of Dan Sinykin’s blockbuster study <em>Big Fiction</em> is that the age of industry conglomeration has had a significant effect on the very nature of contemporary American literature. Increasingly accustomed to working with agents and other intermediaries, and subject to aggressive competition and marketing, authors are now induced to “internalize” the rules of the marketplace via acts of “anticipatory socialization” (10). As a result, Sinykin argues, to grasp this contemporary situation scholars need to do away with a particular “villain”: “the romantic author, the individual loosed by liberalism, the pretense to uniqueness, a mirage veiling the systemic intelligences that are responsible for more of what we read than most of us are ready to acknowledge” (25). Because “conglomerate era fiction displays properties attributable not to any one individual but to the conglomerate superorganism” (12), the figure of the individual author is quite simply inadequate to its analysis. With its chain store buyers, literary agents, and publicists and marketing departments, conglomeration has eroded authorial autonomy. For writers working within these conditions, success depends “less on simply knowing the right people...and more on one’s capacity to accommodate in one’s work the demands of the system” (97). The “relatively autonomous author-editor duo” has given way to “the work of many hands” <strong>[End Page 99]</strong> (99), while marketing “eroded the editor’s power” (99) toward a “systematic intelligence, a systematic authorship” (103).</p> <p>The most extensive corroboration of Sinykin’s point would be found in Claire Squires’s UK-based book <em>Marketing Literature</em> (Palgrave). Published in 2007, it was one of the first major works applying techniques from book history to the contemporary scene. Squires drew upon her own experiences working in publishing, interviewed publishers, agents, and journalists, and consulted the trade press, bestseller lists, marketing materials, and reports by industry analysts. She used these resources to document changes in the British industry since the 1970s, including conglomeration and globalization, the demise of the Net Book Agreement, which had allowed publishers some control over retail prices, and the triumph of the literary agent and the book prize. Her primary concern is the waning of editorial control over literary publishing and, especially, the concomitant “striking intensification” of marketing activity (2). She focuses on the “marketing narratives” produced to sell books (2), and what leeway authors have had to shape those stories. With <em>Big Fiction</em>, Sinykin has written the most comprehensive account of the parallel US case.</p> <p>Like Squires, an interest in what leeway authors have orients Sinykin’s thought, as he argues that fiction itself has become a way for writers to wrest a bit of control back. His most persuasive arguments concern the major formal literary effects of recent industry changes: the predilection toward hybrids between literary and genre fiction, and the rise of autofiction. He accounts for these as literary responses to commercial pressures, inseparable from a broader trend toward literary reflexivity, which finds racialized writers deploying “ironic multiculturalism” to skewer their own market positioning, and women turning to autofiction so that they might covertly describe the constraints they have faced within a male-dominated field (85). Fictional reflexivity is in essence one key means that authors have, here, of negotiating autonomy within the field as Sinykin sees it. Pierre Bourdieu similarly argued that reflexivity was central to the autonomous pole of literary production. As Gisèle Sapiro states in <em>The Sociology of Literature</em>, a brief overview of the field recently translated into English, autonomy is inherently characterized by “the principle of self-referentiality...the act of making reference to the history of the field” (28). One establishes authority through display of the capacity to grasp perfectly all the workings of the field, including one’s own positioning.</p> <p>We might say then that Sinykin’s astute close readings of works...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":54138,"journal":{"name":"STUDIES IN THE NOVEL","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Author As Social Production\",\"authors\":\"Sarah Brouillette\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/sdn.2024.a921061\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> The Author As Social Production <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Sarah Brouillette </li> </ul> SINYKIN, DAN. <em>Big Fiction: How Conglomeration Changed the Publishing Industry and American Literature</em>. New York: Columbia University Press, 2023. 328 pp. Paperback $30.00; hardcover $120.00; e-book $29.99. SAPIRO, GISÈLE. <em>The Sociology of Literature</em>. Trans. Madeline Bedecarré and Ben Libman. Stanford: University of Stanford Press, 2023. 212 pp. Paperback $25.00; hardcover $100.00. <h2>1. Superorganism</h2> <p>The general claim of Dan Sinykin’s blockbuster study <em>Big Fiction</em> is that the age of industry conglomeration has had a significant effect on the very nature of contemporary American literature. Increasingly accustomed to working with agents and other intermediaries, and subject to aggressive competition and marketing, authors are now induced to “internalize” the rules of the marketplace via acts of “anticipatory socialization” (10). As a result, Sinykin argues, to grasp this contemporary situation scholars need to do away with a particular “villain”: “the romantic author, the individual loosed by liberalism, the pretense to uniqueness, a mirage veiling the systemic intelligences that are responsible for more of what we read than most of us are ready to acknowledge” (25). Because “conglomerate era fiction displays properties attributable not to any one individual but to the conglomerate superorganism” (12), the figure of the individual author is quite simply inadequate to its analysis. With its chain store buyers, literary agents, and publicists and marketing departments, conglomeration has eroded authorial autonomy. For writers working within these conditions, success depends “less on simply knowing the right people...and more on one’s capacity to accommodate in one’s work the demands of the system” (97). The “relatively autonomous author-editor duo” has given way to “the work of many hands” <strong>[End Page 99]</strong> (99), while marketing “eroded the editor’s power” (99) toward a “systematic intelligence, a systematic authorship” (103).</p> <p>The most extensive corroboration of Sinykin’s point would be found in Claire Squires’s UK-based book <em>Marketing Literature</em> (Palgrave). Published in 2007, it was one of the first major works applying techniques from book history to the contemporary scene. Squires drew upon her own experiences working in publishing, interviewed publishers, agents, and journalists, and consulted the trade press, bestseller lists, marketing materials, and reports by industry analysts. She used these resources to document changes in the British industry since the 1970s, including conglomeration and globalization, the demise of the Net Book Agreement, which had allowed publishers some control over retail prices, and the triumph of the literary agent and the book prize. Her primary concern is the waning of editorial control over literary publishing and, especially, the concomitant “striking intensification” of marketing activity (2). She focuses on the “marketing narratives” produced to sell books (2), and what leeway authors have had to shape those stories. With <em>Big Fiction</em>, Sinykin has written the most comprehensive account of the parallel US case.</p> <p>Like Squires, an interest in what leeway authors have orients Sinykin’s thought, as he argues that fiction itself has become a way for writers to wrest a bit of control back. His most persuasive arguments concern the major formal literary effects of recent industry changes: the predilection toward hybrids between literary and genre fiction, and the rise of autofiction. He accounts for these as literary responses to commercial pressures, inseparable from a broader trend toward literary reflexivity, which finds racialized writers deploying “ironic multiculturalism” to skewer their own market positioning, and women turning to autofiction so that they might covertly describe the constraints they have faced within a male-dominated field (85). Fictional reflexivity is in essence one key means that authors have, here, of negotiating autonomy within the field as Sinykin sees it. Pierre Bourdieu similarly argued that reflexivity was central to the autonomous pole of literary production. As Gisèle Sapiro states in <em>The Sociology of Literature</em>, a brief overview of the field recently translated into English, autonomy is inherently characterized by “the principle of self-referentiality...the act of making reference to the history of the field” (28). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 作为社会生产的作者 莎拉-布劳莱特-辛金,丹。Big Fiction:大小说:企业集团如何改变出版业和美国文学》(Big Fiction: How Conglomeration Changed the Publishing Industry and American Literature.New York:哥伦比亚大学出版社,2023 年。328 pp.平装本 30.00 美元;精装本 120.00 美元;电子书 29.99 美元。Sapiro, Gisèle.文学社会学》。Trans.马德琳-贝德卡雷和本-利普曼。斯坦福大学出版社,2023 年:斯坦福大学出版社,2023 年。212 pp.平装本 25.00 美元;精装本 100.00 美元。1.超级有机体 丹-辛伊金(Dan Sinykin)的巨著《大小说》(Big Fiction)的总体主张是,产业集团化时代对当代美国文学的本质产生了重大影响。作家们越来越习惯于与代理商和其他中介机构合作,并受到激烈竞争和市场营销的影响,他们现在不得不通过 "预期社会化 "行为 "内化 "市场规则(10)。因此,辛伊金认为,学者们需要摒弃一种特殊的 "恶棍",才能把握当代的这种状况:"浪漫主义的作者,被自由主义束缚的个人,独特性的伪装,掩盖了系统智能的海市蜃楼,而这些智能对我们所阅读的作品的影响远远超出了我们大多数人愿意承认的程度"(25)。由于 "集团时代的小说所表现出的特性不是归因于任何一个个体,而是归因于集团的超级有机体"(12),个人作者的形象根本不足以对其进行分析。企业集团拥有连锁店买家、文学经纪人、公关人员和营销部门,削弱了作者的自主性。对于在这种条件下工作的作家来说,成功 "与其说取决于是否认识合适的人......不如说取决于一个人是否有能力在自己的作品中适应体制的要求"(97)。相对自主的作者-编辑二人组 "已让位于 "多手工作"[第 99 页完] (99),而市场营销 "削弱了编辑的权力"(99),走向 "系统化的智慧、系统化的作者身份"(103)。克莱尔-斯奎尔斯(Claire Squires)在英国出版的《营销文学》(帕尔格雷夫出版社)一书对辛尼金的观点进行了最广泛的佐证。该书出版于 2007 年,是最早将图书史技术应用于当代领域的重要著作之一。斯奎尔斯利用自己在出版业的工作经验,采访了出版商、代理商和记者,并参考了行业媒体、畅销书排行榜、营销材料和行业分析师的报告。她利用这些资源记录了英国出版业自 20 世纪 70 年代以来发生的变化,包括集团化和全球化、允许出版商在一定程度上控制零售价格的《网络图书协议》的消亡,以及文学经纪人和图书奖的胜利。她主要关注的是编辑对文学出版控制的减弱,尤其是随之而来的营销活动的 "惊人强化"(2)。她关注的重点是为卖书而制作的 "营销叙事"(2),以及作者在塑造这些故事时有多大的余地。通过《大小说》,辛伊金对美国的平行案例进行了最全面的阐述。与斯奎尔斯一样,辛伊金也对作家的创作余地感兴趣,他认为小说本身已成为作家夺回控制权的一种方式。他最有说服力的论点涉及近期产业变革对文学形式的主要影响:文学小说与类型小说的混合倾向,以及自传体小说的兴起。他认为这些都是文学对商业压力的回应,与更广泛的文学反思趋势密不可分,其中发现种族化作家利用 "讽刺性的多元文化 "来抨击自己的市场定位,而女性则转向自小说,以便暗中描述她们在男性主导的领域中所面临的限制(85)。在辛伊金看来,小说的反身性实质上是作者在该领域内谈判自主权的一种重要手段。皮埃尔-布尔迪厄(Pierre Bourdieu)同样认为,反身性是文学创作自主性的核心。正如吉赛尔-萨皮罗(Gisèle Sapiro)在《文学社会学》(该领域的简要概述,最近被译成英文)中所言,自主性的内在特征是 "自我参照原则......参照该领域历史的行为"(28)。一个人通过展示完美把握该领域所有运作方式(包括自身定位)的能力来树立权威。因此,我们可以说辛尼金对作品的敏锐细读......
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Author As Social Production
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • The Author As Social Production
  • Sarah Brouillette
SINYKIN, DAN. Big Fiction: How Conglomeration Changed the Publishing Industry and American Literature. New York: Columbia University Press, 2023. 328 pp. Paperback $30.00; hardcover $120.00; e-book $29.99. SAPIRO, GISÈLE. The Sociology of Literature. Trans. Madeline Bedecarré and Ben Libman. Stanford: University of Stanford Press, 2023. 212 pp. Paperback $25.00; hardcover $100.00.

1. Superorganism

The general claim of Dan Sinykin’s blockbuster study Big Fiction is that the age of industry conglomeration has had a significant effect on the very nature of contemporary American literature. Increasingly accustomed to working with agents and other intermediaries, and subject to aggressive competition and marketing, authors are now induced to “internalize” the rules of the marketplace via acts of “anticipatory socialization” (10). As a result, Sinykin argues, to grasp this contemporary situation scholars need to do away with a particular “villain”: “the romantic author, the individual loosed by liberalism, the pretense to uniqueness, a mirage veiling the systemic intelligences that are responsible for more of what we read than most of us are ready to acknowledge” (25). Because “conglomerate era fiction displays properties attributable not to any one individual but to the conglomerate superorganism” (12), the figure of the individual author is quite simply inadequate to its analysis. With its chain store buyers, literary agents, and publicists and marketing departments, conglomeration has eroded authorial autonomy. For writers working within these conditions, success depends “less on simply knowing the right people...and more on one’s capacity to accommodate in one’s work the demands of the system” (97). The “relatively autonomous author-editor duo” has given way to “the work of many hands” [End Page 99] (99), while marketing “eroded the editor’s power” (99) toward a “systematic intelligence, a systematic authorship” (103).

The most extensive corroboration of Sinykin’s point would be found in Claire Squires’s UK-based book Marketing Literature (Palgrave). Published in 2007, it was one of the first major works applying techniques from book history to the contemporary scene. Squires drew upon her own experiences working in publishing, interviewed publishers, agents, and journalists, and consulted the trade press, bestseller lists, marketing materials, and reports by industry analysts. She used these resources to document changes in the British industry since the 1970s, including conglomeration and globalization, the demise of the Net Book Agreement, which had allowed publishers some control over retail prices, and the triumph of the literary agent and the book prize. Her primary concern is the waning of editorial control over literary publishing and, especially, the concomitant “striking intensification” of marketing activity (2). She focuses on the “marketing narratives” produced to sell books (2), and what leeway authors have had to shape those stories. With Big Fiction, Sinykin has written the most comprehensive account of the parallel US case.

Like Squires, an interest in what leeway authors have orients Sinykin’s thought, as he argues that fiction itself has become a way for writers to wrest a bit of control back. His most persuasive arguments concern the major formal literary effects of recent industry changes: the predilection toward hybrids between literary and genre fiction, and the rise of autofiction. He accounts for these as literary responses to commercial pressures, inseparable from a broader trend toward literary reflexivity, which finds racialized writers deploying “ironic multiculturalism” to skewer their own market positioning, and women turning to autofiction so that they might covertly describe the constraints they have faced within a male-dominated field (85). Fictional reflexivity is in essence one key means that authors have, here, of negotiating autonomy within the field as Sinykin sees it. Pierre Bourdieu similarly argued that reflexivity was central to the autonomous pole of literary production. As Gisèle Sapiro states in The Sociology of Literature, a brief overview of the field recently translated into English, autonomy is inherently characterized by “the principle of self-referentiality...the act of making reference to the history of the field” (28). One establishes authority through display of the capacity to grasp perfectly all the workings of the field, including one’s own positioning.

We might say then that Sinykin’s astute close readings of works...

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来源期刊
STUDIES IN THE NOVEL
STUDIES IN THE NOVEL LITERATURE-
CiteScore
0.40
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0.00%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: From its inception, Studies in the Novel has been dedicated to building a scholarly community around the world-making potentialities of the novel. Studies in the Novel started as an idea among several members of the English Department of the University of North Texas during the summer of 1965. They determined that there was a need for a journal “devoted to publishing critical and scholarly articles on the novel with no restrictions on either chronology or nationality of the novelists studied.” The founding editor, University of North Texas professor of contemporary literature James W. Lee, envisioned a journal of international scope and influence. Since then, Studies in the Novel has staked its reputation upon publishing incisive scholarship on the canon-forming and cutting-edge novelists that have shaped the genre’s rich history. The journal continues to break new ground by promoting new theoretical approaches, a broader international scope, and an engagement with the contemporary novel as a form of social critique.
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