Canelo / Arts Council England
Canelo / Arts Council England |
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Literature in the 21st Century report
Canelo / Arts Council England |
27 Literature in the 21st Century: Understanding Models of Support for Literary Fiction 17
Ibid p41 reshape notions of literary value and taste’ 17 . Squires here suggests that our whole idea of what, today, is literary fiction is a function of publisher marketing in the first place. Outlets for publicity and reviews show a similarly mixed picture. Most publishers maintain in-house publicity departments and this remains an industry strength. Yet space devoted to reviews in the traditional media is under relentless pressure. The Guardian is the only broadsheet to maintain a dedicated literary review. In the US, major papers such as the LA Times famously closed their book sections. Publications such as the Times Literary Supplement and the London Review of Books continue to be produced, but they can hardly be said to talk to a mass audience. Television and film’s engagement with literary fiction is limited, but powerful when it does occur. A film adaptation is sure to boost sales immensely and as the Hollywood dream factory runs out of ideas, books are turned to more and more as source material. This can only be a good thing for writers. Ironically, traditional publicity is still probably easier for literary fiction than more commercial genres: reviews pages are more likely to cover it and its writers are more likely to be interviewed on TV. Prizes are the other major source of sales for literary writing. They now form what the scholar James F. English calls an ‘economy of prestige’, whereby the cultural authority and imprimatur of a literary prize is a major source of cash revenue. An analysis of sales data around the leading British literary prize, the Man Booker, confirms this. In the years between 2002 and 2008 there were a series of ‘big’ winners of the Man Booker: Life of Pi, Vernon God Little, The Line
Prize sales lift of 6,456 copies in the week after winning. However, more recently, and despite some of the books being seen as less commercial than these, there has been an average Prize-week sales lift of 12,031 copies, nearly double what it was in the mid-noughties. Two recent winners, Richard Flanagan and Marlon James, both of whom write relatively ‘difficult’ books, each saw around 10,000 additional sales in the week after winning. To put that in perspective, when Ian McEwan’s Amsterdam won in 1998 its weekly sale was 3,000; in 2001 Peter Carey’s The True History of the Kelly Gang was 4,000. Despite everything, and even adjusting for the positive anomaly that was the vast sales of Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall and Bring Up The Bodies, the Man Booker is growing steadily more influential and more powerful as a sales engine. |
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