Description
The market for contemporary authors' archives began when research libraries needed to cheaply provide primary sources for the swelling number of students and faculty following World War II. Demand soon grew, and while writers and their families found new opportunities to make money, so too did book dealers and literary agents with the foresight to pivot their businesses to serve living authors. Public interest surrounding celebrity writers had exploded by the late twentieth century, and as Placing Papers illustrates, even the best funded institutions were forced to contend with the facts that acquiring contemporary literary archives had become cost prohibitive and increasingly competitive.
About the Author
Amy Hildreth Chen is English and communications librarian at the University of Iowa.
Reviews
The author's prose offers sheer grace and cleverness, shrugging off the burdens of the empirical/institutional nature of the project to produce a nascent work of valuable cultural criticism alongside its more purely informational dimension."-Mark McGurl, author of The Program Era: Postwar Fiction and the Rise of Creative Writing
"Chen's research is impressive, drawing from a multifarious range of documents, everything from journals on trends in library science to correspondence with literary market professionals to journalism on trends in publishing."-Eric Bennett, author of Workshops of Empire: Stegner, Engle, and American Creative Writing during the Cold War
Book Information
ISBN 9781625344854
Author Amy Hildreth Chen
Format Paperback
Page Count 192
Imprint University of Massachusetts Press
Publisher University of Massachusetts Press
Weight(grams) 310g