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portada Selling the Story: Transaction and Narrative Value in Balzac, Dostoevsky, and Zola (in English)
Type
Physical Book
Year
2019
Language
English
Pages
336
Format
Hardcover
ISBN13
9780674988439
Edition No.
1

Selling the Story: Transaction and Narrative Value in Balzac, Dostoevsky, and Zola (in English)

Jonathan Paine (Author) · Harvard University Press · Hardcover

Selling the Story: Transaction and Narrative Value in Balzac, Dostoevsky, and Zola (in English) - Jonathan Paine

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Synopsis "Selling the Story: Transaction and Narrative Value in Balzac, Dostoevsky, and Zola (in English)"

A literary scholar and investment banker applies economic criticism to canonical novels, dramatically changing the way we read these classics and proposing a new model for how economics can inform literary analysis.Every writer is a player in the marketplace for literature. Jonathan Paine locates the economics ingrained within the stories themselves, revealing how a text provides a record of its author’s attempt to sell the story to his or her readers.An unusual literary scholar with a background in finance, Paine mines stories for evidence of the conditions of their production. Through his wholly original reading, Balzac’s The Splendors and Miseries of Courtesans becomes a secret diary of its author’s struggles to cope with the commercializing influence of serial publication in newspapers. The Brothers Karamazov transforms into a story of Dostoevsky’s sequential bets with his readers, present and future, about how to write a novel. Zola’s Money documents the rise of big business and is itself a product of Zola’s own big business, his factory of novels.Combining close readings with detailed analyses of the nineteenth-century publishing contexts in which prose fiction first became a product, Selling the Story shows how the business of literature affects even literary devices such as genre, plot, and repetition. Paine argues that no book can be properly understood without reference to its point of sale: the author’s knowledge of the market, of reader expectations, and of his or her own efforts to define and achieve literary value.

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The book is written in English.
The binding of this edition is Hardcover.

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