This article examines the marketing of an author through the integration of their persona into their text to form a brand that can then be purchased by the consuming reader with confidence. Thus a reader chooses a book by a writer known for a particular genre following the same instincts that might prompt them to choose a successful brand. The example used is an early modern woman writer, who developed a genre of scandal fiction that became synonymous with her. The article contextualises the writer giving some indication of the prevalent market conditions and her motivation in differentiating herself from her competitors
The essays in this volume analyze strategies adopted by contemporary novelists, playwrights, screenw...
The chapter is (surprisingly) the first history of marketing and authorship in terms of the fiction ...
This study involves discovering how growing literacy influenced the development of advertising in ea...
“Author Posting © Westburn Publishers Ltd, 2003. This is a post-peer-review, pre-copy-edit version o...
The early modern commercial book market was the cradle of authorial branding. Authors and publishers...
My dissertation, titled Bloody, Strange, and Unnatural Women: Advertising on Early Modern English Ti...
A market comprises three elements : a customer need, a product to fill that need and a means of conn...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of this thesis is to explore how various kinds o...
Restricted until 21 July 2010.Frequently in early modern London, as Elizabeth Fowler aptly put it, ...
International audienceThe aim of this research is to determine whether or not the author name is of ...
This study explores the relationship between defamation of women and the marketplaces of print and r...
Young Agents: the Young Author’s Role on the Dutch Republic’s Book Market1 In this article, we inves...
Young Agents: the Young Author’s Role on the Dutch Republic’s Book Market1 In this article, we inves...
This thesis argues that, unlike the study of commodity branding, the study of literary branding shou...
This dissertation argues that as a commercial print culture developed in America between 1720 and 18...
The essays in this volume analyze strategies adopted by contemporary novelists, playwrights, screenw...
The chapter is (surprisingly) the first history of marketing and authorship in terms of the fiction ...
This study involves discovering how growing literacy influenced the development of advertising in ea...
“Author Posting © Westburn Publishers Ltd, 2003. This is a post-peer-review, pre-copy-edit version o...
The early modern commercial book market was the cradle of authorial branding. Authors and publishers...
My dissertation, titled Bloody, Strange, and Unnatural Women: Advertising on Early Modern English Ti...
A market comprises three elements : a customer need, a product to fill that need and a means of conn...
grantor: University of TorontoThe purpose of this thesis is to explore how various kinds o...
Restricted until 21 July 2010.Frequently in early modern London, as Elizabeth Fowler aptly put it, ...
International audienceThe aim of this research is to determine whether or not the author name is of ...
This study explores the relationship between defamation of women and the marketplaces of print and r...
Young Agents: the Young Author’s Role on the Dutch Republic’s Book Market1 In this article, we inves...
Young Agents: the Young Author’s Role on the Dutch Republic’s Book Market1 In this article, we inves...
This thesis argues that, unlike the study of commodity branding, the study of literary branding shou...
This dissertation argues that as a commercial print culture developed in America between 1720 and 18...
The essays in this volume analyze strategies adopted by contemporary novelists, playwrights, screenw...
The chapter is (surprisingly) the first history of marketing and authorship in terms of the fiction ...
This study involves discovering how growing literacy influenced the development of advertising in ea...