1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910855398703321

Autore

Nissen Annie

Titolo

Authors and Adaptation : Writing Across Media in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries / / by Annie Nissen

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cham : , : Springer Nature Switzerland : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2024

ISBN

9783031468223

Edizione

[1st ed. 2024.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (262 pages)

Collana

Palgrave Studies in Adaptation and Visual Culture, , 2634-6303

Disciplina

823.809

Soggetti

Adaptation (Literary, artistic, etc.)

Adaptation Studies

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Copyright Law, Authorial Ownership, and Adaptation Between Novels and Plays in Nineteenth-Century Britain -- Chapter 3: Changes in Writer Stratifications across Media in Nineteenth-Century Britain -- Chapter 4: Adaptation, Ownership, and the Emergence of Narrative Film -- Chapter 5: Literary Writers and Filmmaking Practices in Silent Cinema -- Chapter 6: Literary Writers and Early Sound Film: Experimental Writing -- Chapter 7: Conclusion.

Sommario/riassunto

“Like a reporter covering nineteenth-century copyright trials, public debates between prominent authors, and major legislative developments, Annie Nissen weaves through a range of examples of writers, including Charles Dickens, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, and George Bernard Shaw, and the many adaptations of their books for stage and screen. This book provides a detailed picture of the business of authorship and adaptation across page, theater, and early film. Enlightening and indispensable.” —Lissette Lopez Szwydky, PhD, Associate Professor, University of Arkansas, USA “Nissen does an outstanding job of pushing deep into a complex matrix of issues. This is an impressive piece of scholarship and an excellent resource for adaptation studies.” —Glenn Jellenik, Associate Professor of English, University of Central Arkansas, USA “Spanning a wide range of authors and a long historical arc, Authors and Adaptation offers important new



information about and insights into literature, theatre, film, and adaptation studies. Nissen resurrects theoretically and historically dead authors as live writers creating and critiquing intermedial adaptations, invaluably bridging gaps between theory and practice as well as between disciplines, media, and periods.” —Kamilla Elliott, Professor of Literature and Media, Lancaster University, UK This book studies British literary writers’ engagement with adaptations of their work across literary, theatrical, and film media in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It considers their critical, reflective, and autobiographical writings about the process of adaptation, and traces how their work was shaped, as well as delimited, by their involvement with adaptations to different media and intermedial writing. Linking canonical and non-canonical writers both chronologically and contemporaneously, and bridging studies of prose fiction adaptation from nineteenth-century theatre to early twentieth-century film, this book offers an interdisciplinary, transhistorical, cultural, and analytical study of adaptation and the variable positions of writers within and across media. Annie Nissen currently works at Lancaster University, UK, where she has been an Associate Lecturer for both Film Studies and English Literature and a Research Associate for the ‘Cinema Memory and the Digital Archive’ project. .