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Work of Fiction: Making a Living from Writing in the UK explores the lived experiences of fiction writers in the UK and how they make a living. Based on a substantial body of interviews with a range of fiction writers, it considers the ways that writers think about and talk about writing as work and how 'discourses of writing' operate to support or undermine them as cultural workers. It argues that discourses of love, luck, magic, and 'being a writer' function in complex ways to position writers in enchanted and elevated spaces which both nurture their practice and undermine their status as remunerated workers in the creative sector.
The book shows how the positives and negatives of often precarious cultural work are played out for fiction writers. It has implications for writers in the ways that they think about and talk about themselves as workers, and how the publishing industry values their contributions.
Focuses on the lived experiences of writers of fiction in the UK and how they make a living Considers writing as work and how 'discourses of writing' operate to support or undermine writers as cultural workers Based on 32+ qualitative interviews with writers and industry experts
Auteur
Christina Williams is Associate Lecturer in Media Communications at Bath Spa University, UK.
Texte du rabat
Work of Fiction: Making a Living from Writing in the UK explores the lived experiences of fiction writers in the UK and how they make a living. Based on a substantial body of interviews with a range of fiction writers, it considers the ways that writers think about and talk about writing as work and how discourses of writing operate to support or undermine them as cultural workers. It argues that discourses of love, luck, magic, and being a writer function in complex ways to position writers in enchanted and elevated spaces which both nurture their practice and undermine their status as remunerated workers in the creative sector. The book shows how the positives and negatives of often precarious cultural work are played out for fiction writers. It has implications for writers in the ways that they think about and talk about themselves as workers, and how the publishing industry values their contributions.
Contenu
1: Introduction: the precarious work of diction writing.- 2: Theorizing the Writer as Cultural Worker.-3: Making a Living From Writing Fiction.- 4: Writing as Work and Not-Work.- 5: The Future-Orientation of Writers: hope and maybeness.- 6: Discourses of Writing.- 7: Conclusions.
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