Description
Making World Literature posits that network theory can effectively model the agency of actors and institutions in the literary field, making visible both the long-term accrual of power, as well as the choices of authors, translators, editors, and readers who do not simply replicate the values of a global literary marketplace, but divert, question, and undermine them. Muenchrath closely examines the paratexts and archival documents surrounding moments of global circulation in and through institutions like US world literature anthologies, the Council of Books in Wartime, the Iowa Writer's Workshop, Oprah's Book Club, and Amazon's translation imprint. The granularity of these case studies reveals the increasingly limited agency of the individual in the global literary field, demonstrating how such players are important actors, and how their choices open up further options for later actors seeking to take texts down new paths toward or after publication.
About the Author
Anna Muenchrath is assistant professor of English at the Florida Institute of Technology. Her scholarship has appeared in American Literature, Post-45, Journal of World Literature, and Book History.
Book Information
ISBN 9781625348401
Author Anna Muenchrath
Format Paperback
Page Count 296
Imprint University of Massachusetts Press
Publisher University of Massachusetts Press