The Grand Chorus of Complaint:Authors and the Business Ethics of American Publishing

抱怨大合唱:作者和美国出版商业伦理

美国文学

原   价:
606.25
售   价:
485.00
优惠
平台大促 低至8折优惠
发货周期:预计5-7周发货
作      者
出  版 社
出版时间
2011年06月16日
装      帧
精装
ISBN
9780199751785
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页      码
256
开      本
235x156mm
语      种
英文
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库存 30 本
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图书简介
When Lord Byron toasted Napoleon for executing a bookseller, and when American satirist Fitz-Greene Halleck picketed his New York publisher for trying to starve him, both writers were taking part in a time-honored tradition--calling out publishers as unregenerate capitalists. However apocryphal, both stories speak to what writer Gail Hamilton called "the conflict of the ages," the feud between and writers and publishers over the way the business of print ought to be conducted. The Grand Chorus of Complaint is a study of the terms of that feud in early America. Ranging from the Revolution to the Civil War, Michael Everton explores moral propriety in American literary culture, arguing that debates over the business of authorship and publishing in the first century of the United States were simultaneously debates over the ethics and character of capitalism. The Grand Chorus of Complaint shows that the moral discourse authors and publishers used in these debates was not intended as a distraction from the "real" issues affecting American literary culture. Instead, morality was itself at issue. Drawing on a diverse archive, Everton argues that in their business correspondence and fiction, in their diaries and essays, authors and publishers talked so much about ethics not to obfuscate their convictions but to clarify them in a commercial world preoccupied by the meanings and efficacy of moral beliefs. This study illustrates that ethics should matter as much to literary and book historians as much as it has come to matter--again--to literary critics and theorists.
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