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Literature in the electric age

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posted on 2021-04-12, 15:34 authored by Lise JaillantLise Jaillant

This chapter focuses not on a particular literary technology, but on the shifts in the literary field that occurred in response to the threat of obsolescence at the hands of competing media such as film and television. Adapting marketing techniques from those media, and capitalizing on new formats such as the paperback, the literary field broadened to expand its appeal to an ever-widening “middlebrow” reading public. By the 1930s, Jaillant argues, these developments in format and marketing had effectively broken down any rigid dividing line between “literary” and “nonliterary” reading publics, so that advertisements for a bestseller such as Pearl S. Buck’s The Good Earth and James Joyce’s modernist classic Ulysses could appear side by side.

History

School

  • Social Sciences and Humanities

Department

  • Communication and Media

Published in

Technology and Literature

Pages

125 - 140

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Rights holder

© Cambridge University Press & Assessment

Publisher statement

This material has been published in revised form in Technology and Literature edited by Adam Hammond https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108560740. This version is free to view and download for private research and study only. Not for re-distribution or re-use. © copyright holder.

Publication date

2023-11-30

Copyright date

2024

ISBN

9781108560740; 9781108472586

Book series

Cambridge Critical Concepts

Language

  • en

Editor(s)

Adam Hammond

Depositor

Dr Lise Jaillant. Deposit date: 9 April 2021

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