
State Sponsored Literature Britain and Cultural Diversity after 1945
by Rogers, AshaBuy New
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Summary
State Sponsored Literature retells the story of literature's place in post-war Britain through original analysis of the institutional forces behind canon-formation and contestation, from the literature programmes of the British Council and Arts Council and the UK's fraught relations with UNESCO, to GCSE literature anthologies and the origins of The Satanic Verses in migrant Camden. The state did not shape literary production in a vacuum, Rogers argues, but its policies, practices, and priorities were also inexorably shaped in turn. Demonstrating how archival work can potentially transform our understanding of literature, this book challenges how we think about literature's value by asking what state involvement has meant for writers, readers, institutions, and the ideal of autonomy itself.
Author Biography
Asha Rogers, Lecturer in Contemporary Postcolonial Literature, Department of English Literature, University of Birmingham
Asha Rogers is a lecturer in the School of English, Drama & Creative Studies at the University of Birmingham, where she specialises in the interfaces between writers, print culture and institutions and postcolonial literatures in English.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. Between Kultur and Civilisation: The British Council and Literary Diplomacy before 1945
2. First Aid for Writers: Literature and the Arts Council of Great Britain (1966-1981)
3. On White Men and Burdens: the Arts Council and black British writing
4. The Satanic Verses and the State (I): Rushdie and the Camden Committee for Community Relations
5. The Satanic Verses and the State (II): Protecting the Man and the Book
6. 'Literary' versus 'Cultural' Texts in the NEAB Anthology
7. UNESCO, the United Kingdom, and Cultural Diversity after the Millennium
Postscript: Literary fiction on the Edge
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