04595nam 22007095 450 991041832500332120230810171348.03-030-53409-X10.1007/978-3-030-53409-7(CKB)4100000011469645(MiAaPQ)EBC6356646(DE-He213)978-3-030-53409-7(PPN)25474964X(EXLCZ)99410000001146964520200923d2020 u| 0engurnn|008mamaatxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Novel as Network Forms, Ideas, Commodities /edited by Tim Lanzendörfer, Corinna Norrick-Rühl1st ed. 2020.Cham :Springer International Publishing :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2020.1 online resource (XVI, 327 p. 1 illus.) New Directions in Book History,2634-61253-030-53408-1 Chapter 1: Introduction: The Novel as Network, Tim Lanzendörfer and Corinna Norrick-Rühl -- Chapter 2: Introduction: Novel Forms, Tim Lanzendörfer -- Chapter 3: The Novel’s Novelty Now, Mathias Nilges -- Chapter 4: The Cosmopolitan Value of the Multicultural Novel, Kristian Shaw -- Chapter 5: The Novel Network and the Work of Genre, Tim Lanzendörfer -- Chapter 6: Can a Novel Contain a Comic? Graphic Nerd Ecology in Contemporary US Fiction, Christopher Pizzino -- Chapter 7: Introduction: Novel Ideas, Tim Lanzendörfer and Corinna Norrick-Rühl -- Chapter 8: Speculative Nostalgia and Media of the New Intersectional Left: My Favorite Thing is Monsters, Stephen Shapiro -- Chapter 9: From Comic to Graphic and from Book to Novel: Sandman’s Invisible Authors and the Quest for Literariness, Julia Round -- Chapter 10: Listening to the Literary: On the Novelistic Poetics of the Podcast, Patrick Gill -- Chapter 11: The Video Game Novel: Story-World Narratives, Novelization, and the Contemporary Novel’s Network, Tamer Thabet and Tim Lanzendörfer -- Chapter 12: Introduction: Novel Commodities, Corinna Norrick-Rühl -- Chapter 13: Locating the Goods in Contemporary Literary Culture: Between the Book and the Archive, Jim Collins -- Chapter 14: Auratic Facsimile: The Print Novel in the Age of Digital Reproduction, Julia Panko -- Chapter 15: Sensing the Novel/Seeing the Book/Selling the Goods, Claire Squires -- Chapter 16: Shakespeare Novelized: Hogarth, Symbolic Capital, and the Literary Market, Jeremy Rosen -- Chapter 17: Reading the Small American Novel: The Aesthetic Agency of the Short Book in the Modern Literary Marketplace, Alexander Starre.The Novel as Network: Forms, Ideas, Commodities engages with the contemporary Anglophone novel and its derivatives and by-products such as graphic novels, comics, podcasts, and Quality TV. This collection investigates the meaning of the novel in the larger system of contemporary media production and (post-)print culture, viewing the novel through the lens of actor network theory as a node in the novel network. Chapters underscore the deep interconnection between all the aspects of the novel, between the novel as a (literary) form, as an idea, and as a commodity. Bringing together experts from American, British, and Postcolonial Studies, as well as Book, Publishing, and Media Studies, this collection offers a new vantage point to view the novel in its multifacetious expressions today.New Directions in Book History,2634-6125BooksHistoryFictionDigital humanitiesAdaptation (Literary, artistic, etc.)PrintingPublishers and publishingHistory of the BookFiction LiteratureDigital HumanitiesAdaptation StudiesPrinting and PublishingBooksHistory.Fiction.Digital humanities.Adaptation (Literary, artistic, etc.).Printing.Publishers and publishing.History of the Book.Fiction Literature.Digital Humanities.Adaptation Studies.Printing and Publishing.823.9209800Lanzendörfer TimNorrick-Rühl CorinnaMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910418325003321The novel as network2294847UNINA