Recent literary scholarship usually distinguishes between two types of autonomy. Institutional autonomy concerns the creation of a professional and independent literary field, whereas poetical autonomy points to ideas about the self-legitimizing power of literary artworks. In the Netherlands both forms of autonomy supposedly arose almost simultaneously at the end of the nineteenth century. This article introduces a third form of autonomy: discursive autonomy, an author’s way of speaking and writing that shows how he places himself in a(n) (semi-)independent position. This form of autonomy already manifests itself in the early nineteenth century among marginal authors, especially hack writers. In this article, two of those authors are discus...
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...
Literary celebrity results from a clash between two discursive configurations: literary authorship a...
Recent literary scholarship usually distinguishes between two types of autonomy.Institutional autono...
Recent literary scholarship usually distinguishes between two types of autonomy. Institutional auton...
Recent literary scholarship usually distinguishes between two types of autonomy. Institutional auton...
Literary authors have authority. This is certainly true of the early twenty-first century, as writer...
Autonomy is often interpreted as a historical phenomenon: in field theory and other historical narra...
Authorship is a ‘trending topic’ in literary studies: specialists from all periods and languages hav...
This article discusses the Authors’ Protest, organised by a group of Dutch literary writers in 1962-...
Authorship is a ‘trending topic’ in literary studies: specialists from all periods and languages hav...
Abstract: Autonomy in the arts is generally considered an outdated concept, an atavism that is only ...
A grand narrative of Dutch literary authors’ opportunities to economically profit from their writing...
In this contribution I examine how Flemish nineteenth-century men of letters, and more specifically:...
Contains fulltext : 205036.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)15 p
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...
Literary celebrity results from a clash between two discursive configurations: literary authorship a...
Recent literary scholarship usually distinguishes between two types of autonomy.Institutional autono...
Recent literary scholarship usually distinguishes between two types of autonomy. Institutional auton...
Recent literary scholarship usually distinguishes between two types of autonomy. Institutional auton...
Literary authors have authority. This is certainly true of the early twenty-first century, as writer...
Autonomy is often interpreted as a historical phenomenon: in field theory and other historical narra...
Authorship is a ‘trending topic’ in literary studies: specialists from all periods and languages hav...
This article discusses the Authors’ Protest, organised by a group of Dutch literary writers in 1962-...
Authorship is a ‘trending topic’ in literary studies: specialists from all periods and languages hav...
Abstract: Autonomy in the arts is generally considered an outdated concept, an atavism that is only ...
A grand narrative of Dutch literary authors’ opportunities to economically profit from their writing...
In this contribution I examine how Flemish nineteenth-century men of letters, and more specifically:...
Contains fulltext : 205036.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)15 p
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...
Literary celebrity results from a clash between two discursive configurations: literary authorship a...