A grand narrative of Dutch literary authors’ opportunities to economically profit from their writing is yet to be written. The general assumption, however, is that these opportunities developed teleologically from a dominant system of patronage during medieval and early modern times, in which financial gains were marginal and in which author’s independence of their supporters was constrained, to a system in which the commercial book market was dominant and where authors could be more self-supporting and thus more independent of supporters. This article argues that there is no such teleology. On the contrary: on the basis of an exploration of both practice and discourse of literary authors’ profits from the Middle Ages to the present, we con...
Recent literary scholarship usually distinguishes between two types of autonomy.Institutional autono...
This book explores how authors profited from their writings in the late eighteenth and early ninetee...
This article presents the first diachronic overview of the economic, social and symbolic profits of ...
A grand narrative of Dutch literary authors’ opportunities to economically profit from their writing...
This article argues that it is both important and viable to develop a diachronic perspective on the ...
Throughout the centuries, many literary authors were engaged in writing theatre plays. Although ther...
This essay examines how economic circumstances and imperatives influenced strategies of self‐represe...
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 paper explores how an article by Marita Mathijsen on literary subsidies in the nineteenth centu...
Literary authors have authority. This is certainly true of the early twenty-first century, as writer...
In this contribution I examine how Flemish nineteenth-century men of letters, and more specifically:...
The aim of this study has been to try and arrive at a satisfactory solution of the problem of profit...
In the Dutch Golden Age every literary publication of major importance was packed with preliminary l...
This article discusses the Authors’ Protest, organised by a group of Dutch literary writers in 1962-...
Recent literary scholarship usually distinguishes between two types of autonomy.Institutional autono...
This book explores how authors profited from their writings in the late eighteenth and early ninetee...
This article presents the first diachronic overview of the economic, social and symbolic profits of ...
A grand narrative of Dutch literary authors’ opportunities to economically profit from their writing...
This article argues that it is both important and viable to develop a diachronic perspective on the ...
Throughout the centuries, many literary authors were engaged in writing theatre plays. Although ther...
This essay examines how economic circumstances and imperatives influenced strategies of self‐represe...
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 paper explores how an article by Marita Mathijsen on literary subsidies in the nineteenth centu...
Literary authors have authority. This is certainly true of the early twenty-first century, as writer...
In this contribution I examine how Flemish nineteenth-century men of letters, and more specifically:...
The aim of this study has been to try and arrive at a satisfactory solution of the problem of profit...
In the Dutch Golden Age every literary publication of major importance was packed with preliminary l...
This article discusses the Authors’ Protest, organised by a group of Dutch literary writers in 1962-...
Recent literary scholarship usually distinguishes between two types of autonomy.Institutional autono...
This book explores how authors profited from their writings in the late eighteenth and early ninetee...
This article presents the first diachronic overview of the economic, social and symbolic profits of ...