This dissertation explores how a solitary writer becomes a social writer, entering into the industrial and community relations of mass publishing. A significant part of this transformation is managed through writing organizations which mediate between the corporate world and individual writers. Despite being one of the most prolific and commercially successful book-markets in a time when both publishing and reading are perceived to be under threat, romance fiction, because of its gendered and classed status, is often neglected by the academy and patronized in the media. Researched through observation of the largest romance writers groups in Canada, which I call City Romance Writers, this dissertation explores how writers’ associations help ...
Writing fiction is often seen as a desirable way to make a living. However, survey findings have sho...
This thesis delves into the reasons for the continued success of the romance genre in the midst of d...
This book explores how authors profited from their writings in the late eighteenth and early ninetee...
This dissertation explores how a solitary writer becomes a social writer, entering into the industri...
This study is an investigation of the media subculture constituted by female writers of the mass-mar...
There is no more polarizing literary genre than romance. It is often referred to in academic and lit...
In the early 2000s, as digital technologies disrupted one cultural industry after another, scholars ...
Romance novels have changed significantly since they first entered the public consciousness. Instead...
Genres like romance have long been seen as nodes of cultural conversation that negotiate broader soc...
Popular romance fiction is the most prolific and profitable popular genre globally, a robust counter...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. December 2008. Major: English. Advisor: Dr. Timothy Bren...
This study examines women’s engagements with popular romance fiction. Framing genres as sites of par...
The focus of this defense is the publishing industry\u27s and literary critics\u27 treatment of the...
Many studies of the romance genre written from a feminist perspective, including Radway's classic st...
Authorship is not merely an act of putting pen to paper or fingers to keyboard; it is a social ident...
Writing fiction is often seen as a desirable way to make a living. However, survey findings have sho...
This thesis delves into the reasons for the continued success of the romance genre in the midst of d...
This book explores how authors profited from their writings in the late eighteenth and early ninetee...
This dissertation explores how a solitary writer becomes a social writer, entering into the industri...
This study is an investigation of the media subculture constituted by female writers of the mass-mar...
There is no more polarizing literary genre than romance. It is often referred to in academic and lit...
In the early 2000s, as digital technologies disrupted one cultural industry after another, scholars ...
Romance novels have changed significantly since they first entered the public consciousness. Instead...
Genres like romance have long been seen as nodes of cultural conversation that negotiate broader soc...
Popular romance fiction is the most prolific and profitable popular genre globally, a robust counter...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. December 2008. Major: English. Advisor: Dr. Timothy Bren...
This study examines women’s engagements with popular romance fiction. Framing genres as sites of par...
The focus of this defense is the publishing industry\u27s and literary critics\u27 treatment of the...
Many studies of the romance genre written from a feminist perspective, including Radway's classic st...
Authorship is not merely an act of putting pen to paper or fingers to keyboard; it is a social ident...
Writing fiction is often seen as a desirable way to make a living. However, survey findings have sho...
This thesis delves into the reasons for the continued success of the romance genre in the midst of d...
This book explores how authors profited from their writings in the late eighteenth and early ninetee...