Marketing Literature and Posthumous Legacies: The Symbolic Capital of Leonid Andreev and Vladimir Nabokov
Literature is not only about aesthetics, but also almost equally about economics. The successful marketing of an author and his literary works is more dependent on the activities of cultural merchants than on the particular words and phrases found in the author’s prose. Marketing Literature and Posthumous Legacies focuses on the creation of symbolic capital for the literary legacies of Leonid Andreev and Vladimir Nabokov that was eventually exchanged by cultural merchants for financial and ideological profit. Yuri Leving and Frederick H. White discuss the ways in which certain cultural merchants created symbolic meaning for these two authors through a process of collusion, consecration, and the marketing of tangible and intangible products that lead to some sort of transaction. The promotion and maintenance of posthumous legacies involves an intricate network of personal interests that drive the preservation of literary reputations.
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Marketing Literature and Posthumous Legacies: The Symbolic Capital of Leonid Andreev and Vladimir Nabokov
Literature is not only about aesthetics, but also almost equally about economics. The successful marketing of an author and his literary works is more dependent on the activities of cultural merchants than on the particular words and phrases found in the author’s prose. Marketing Literature and Posthumous Legacies focuses on the creation of symbolic capital for the literary legacies of Leonid Andreev and Vladimir Nabokov that was eventually exchanged by cultural merchants for financial and ideological profit. Yuri Leving and Frederick H. White discuss the ways in which certain cultural merchants created symbolic meaning for these two authors through a process of collusion, consecration, and the marketing of tangible and intangible products that lead to some sort of transaction. The promotion and maintenance of posthumous legacies involves an intricate network of personal interests that drive the preservation of literary reputations.
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Marketing Literature and Posthumous Legacies: The Symbolic Capital of Leonid Andreev and Vladimir Nabokov

Marketing Literature and Posthumous Legacies: The Symbolic Capital of Leonid Andreev and Vladimir Nabokov

Marketing Literature and Posthumous Legacies: The Symbolic Capital of Leonid Andreev and Vladimir Nabokov

Marketing Literature and Posthumous Legacies: The Symbolic Capital of Leonid Andreev and Vladimir Nabokov

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Overview

Literature is not only about aesthetics, but also almost equally about economics. The successful marketing of an author and his literary works is more dependent on the activities of cultural merchants than on the particular words and phrases found in the author’s prose. Marketing Literature and Posthumous Legacies focuses on the creation of symbolic capital for the literary legacies of Leonid Andreev and Vladimir Nabokov that was eventually exchanged by cultural merchants for financial and ideological profit. Yuri Leving and Frederick H. White discuss the ways in which certain cultural merchants created symbolic meaning for these two authors through a process of collusion, consecration, and the marketing of tangible and intangible products that lead to some sort of transaction. The promotion and maintenance of posthumous legacies involves an intricate network of personal interests that drive the preservation of literary reputations.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739182604
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 09/12/2013
Pages: 294
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Yuri Leving is professor and chair of the Department of Russian Studies at Dalhousie University.
Frederick H. White is the associate dean of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences at Utah Valley University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
PART I: THE ANDREEVS
Chapter 1: The Early Visual Marketing of Leonid Andreev
Chapter 2: Marketing Strategies:Vadim Andreev in Dialogue with the Soviet Union
Chapter 3: The Role of the Scholar in the Consecration of Leonid Andreev (1950s to present)
Chapter 4: Creating Posthumous Legacies: The Power to Consecrate and to Blaspheme. Vadim Andreev’s Memories of Childhood
Chapter 5: Market Pressures:Vadim Andreev’s Incomplete Memoiristic Journey
PART II: THE NABOKOVS
Chapter 6: Nabokov and the Publishing Business
Chapter 7: Plaster, Marble, Canon: The Vindication of Nabokov in Post-Soviet Russia
Chapter 8: The Visual Marketing of Nabokov: Who is the Face of the Russian Lolita?
Chapter 9: “Nabokov-7”: Russian Postmodernism in Search of a National Identity
Chapter 10: Interpreting Voids: Nabokov’s Last Incomplete Novel, The Original of Laura
Conclusion
Bibliography
About the Authors

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