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[Commlist] CFP: Authors as Characters in Fiction and Film
Wed Dec 18 18:14:47 GMT 2024
*Call For Chapters*
**
We are putting together a book proposal which will soon be submitted to
Bloomsbury, under the provisional title /Authors as Characters in
Fiction and Film/. We are seeking chapter proposals to complete an
already substantial table of contents.
The volume will be edited by Nathalie Collé, Monica Latham, William
McKenzie and Matthew Smith.
*Submission Guidelines:* Please submit your chapter proposals (which
should include the title of the paper, author(s), a 250-300-word
abstract, institutional affiliation, contact information and a short
bio-bibliography) *before 15 February 2025*, to the following address:
(idea-authors-as-characters-contact /at/ univ-lorraine.fr)
<http://(idea-authors-as-characters-contact /at/ univ-lorraine.fr)>
Provisional acceptance (pending Bloomsbury’s own double blind review
process) will be notified by *1 March 2025 *and full chapters, which
should be between 6,000 and 8,000 words (including footnotes and
bibliography), should be submitted for *15 July 2025*. Bloomsbury
guidelines on style should be respected and are available here:
https://www.bloomsbury.com/media/qufna2uj/ba-house-style-for-authors-and-editorssept16.pdf
<https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/discover/bloomsbury-academic/authors/style-guidelines/>
Contributions which *simultaneously address the fields of biofiction
_and_ biopics* are particularly welcome.
The existing planned table of contents (by alphabetical order in this
draft version) is below. The third column of the table specifies corpus
material (where the information is available) if this does not appear in
the draft chapter title, as this will be of help in avoiding submitting
abstracts for fields that are already covered.
Kathie Birat, Université de Lorraine
‘“It’s the territory that’s important”: Caryl Phillips’s Fictional
Representation of Jean Rhys in A/View of the Empire at Sunset/’
Antonella Braida, Université de Lorraine
‘Mary Shelley as Character in Contemporary Fiction and Drama: Feminist
and Remedial Rewritings’
Shelley Jackson/, Patchwork Girl/; Liz Lochhead, /Blood //and Ice/;
Debora Clair, /Conception/
Tom Brown, King’s College London
‘Author-Biopics in Classical Hollywood: Gender, Agency and Labour’
/The Life of Emile Zola /(1937); /The Adventures of Mark Twain /(1944)
Laura Cernat, KU Leuven
‘From Vertigo to Nostalgia: Five Phases of Author Revival Biofiction’
Jean-Marie Lecomte, Université de Lorraine
‘A Film History of Lives of Poets on Screen: Film Form and Cultural Context’
/If I Were a King/ (1920); /The Beloved Rogue/ (1927); /The Vagabond
King/" (1930)
Camille Martin-Payre, Université de Tours
Wildean biopics
Will McKenzie, Université Catholique de l’Ouest
‘Writing in Will’s Name: Characterising and Charactering Shakespeare in
/Hamnet/: /A Novel of the Plague/ by Maggie O’Farrell and Shakespeare’s
Sonnets 135 and 136’
Doriane Nemes, Université de Lorraine
‘Oscar as Forgery of Wilde? Biofiction and the Truth of Masks’
Peter Ackroyd, /The Last Testament of Oscar Wilde /(1983), Rohase
Piercy, /The Coward Does It With A Kiss /(1990), Robert Holloway, /The
Unauthorized Letters of Oscar Wilde/ (1997), Louis Edwards, /Oscar Wilde
Discovers America/ (2003) Merlin Holland, /Coffee with Oscar Wilde/ (2007)
Armelle Parey, Université de Caen Normandie
‘“Find your own voice, Mary”: Haïfaa Al-Mansour’s /Mary Shelley/ (2017)
as Neo-Romantic Biopic?’
Anne-Laure Rigeade, Université Paris-Est Créteil
‘What is an Author-Character? The Case of Virginia Woolf in
French-Language Biofiction’
Matthew Smith, Université de Lorraine
‘Postmodern Fantasy or Reverse-Engineering the Authentic in Biofiction
and Biopics: The Cases of Stephanie Barron’s /Jane Austen Mystery
Series/ and Julian Jarrold’s /Becoming Jane/ (2007)’
The great paradox of the modern age appears to be that, since Roland
Barthes announced the ‘death of the Author’, there has never been so
much fascination or indeed obsession with authorial figures, tangible in
fiction and film. The aim of this publication is to understand the
fetishisation of English-speaking canonical authors (such as William
Shakespeare, Virginia Woolf, Jane Austen, the Brontë sisters, Henry
James, Charles Dickens, Oscar Wilde, Sylvia Plath, Mary Shelley, D. H.
Lawrence, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway), the ‘versioning’
(Silver xvi) of their texts and images, the fabrication of myths which
are ‘endlessly repeated and woven into culture’ (Miller xiii), the
relationship between auctoriality and celebrity, and artistic and
historiographic representations. The most recent contributions to the
field have been, respectively, Paul Franssen and Ton Hoenselaars’s /The
Author as Character: Representing Historical Writers in Western
Literature/ (1999), Hila Shachar’s /Screening the Author: The Literary
Biopic /(2019) and Bethany Layne’s /T//he Author as Character:
Representing Historical Writers in Western Literature/ (2020). However,
much work remains to be done on the sub-genre that is the literary
biopic, and the production of biofiction and biopics has continued apace
over recent decades producing ever more material to be examined. What is
more, concerning the issue of pre-postmodern productions of this type,
including in the classic age of cinema, the surface has barely been
scratched.
The volume seeks to explore two main generic perspectives, and ideally
simultaneously:
*Biofiction*. According to Michael Lackey’s widely accepted definition,
biofiction is ‘literature that names its protagonist after an actual
biographical figure’ (2016) and takes advantage of the writing
techniques of the novel to present the ‘evidence-based discourse of
biography’ (Lodge, 2014). It is a genre which ‘has become a very
fashionable form of literary fiction’ (Lodge, 2014) in the last decades,
and in recent years has become the subject of Biofiction Studies, a
dynamic scholarly discipline that has ‘finally emancipated itself from
both historical fiction and life writing and has chartered a narrative
space uniquely its own’ (Lackey, 2017). More specific concepts indicate
that critics have chiselled the features of the genre even more finely
to suggest that it is precisely the figure of an author who becomes a
character in fiction, leading to the notion of ‘author fiction’
(Fokkema, 1999; Savu, 2009), or the genre of ‘author as character’
(Franssen and Hoenselaars, 1999). Contemporary biofictionalists
reimagine writers at work, deploy the subjects-writers’ own literary
techniques and reproduce their stylistic signature: literary biofiction
is therefore an imaginative appropriation of the literature as well as
of the life of a past iconic writer.
*Biopics*. According to Tom Brown and Belén Vidal, a biopic is ‘a
fiction film that deals with a figure whose existence is documented in
history, and whose claims to fame or notoriety warrant the uniqueness of
his or her story’ (2014). A biopic uses both historical facts and the
screenwriter’s imagination to depict memorable scenes in the lives of
famous historical figures; it is very much in keeping with today’s
celebrity culture. The genesis and plot of the writer-character’s books
are often woven into the cinematographic narratives of their lives. In
this case, biopics raise a specific challenge: how can the writer’s
prose be translated or adapted into moving images in a way that is
entertaining to watch, while at the same time rendering the style of the
writer portrayed in the film? Scholarship on writers’ biopics (Buchanan,
Frus, Henke, Jardonnet, and Wilson) has mainly examined the intermedial
relationship between the author’s writing and the film narrative, as
well as intertextual allusions to the writer’s life and oeuvre that are
inserted in the biopic’s plot. Other scholars (Stetz, 2000) propose an
altogether different approach by focusing not on the literariness but on
the social and political status of the writer as a disruptive social
force and critic of their own time; they examine the biopic’s
appropriation of the writer to make a transhistorical commentary on
current contemporary issues.
Contributors are invited to consider particular case studies and may
address the following general questions:
* Why are some authors depicted more frequently than others in
biofictions, biopics and graphic novels, and how are these authorial
figures represented remembered and commemorated today?
* How is the life of an author represented? Is it romanticised,
dramatised, or Hollywood-ised? What specific moments of their life
are selected and why? Which well-known events and (sometimes)
stereotyped images are used by contemporary authors to portray their
characters? What versions or interpretations of these authors
survive and are ingrained in our cultural memory? How do these
representations contribute to reinforcing an author’s iconic status,
cultural image and literary reputation?
* Which features (of the author and their work) are consumed by the
general public and spread in popular culture? Are these ‘popular’
texts and visual representations a convenient entry-point into
highbrow literature?
* How are the original writing styles of the canonical authors
transposed?
* How does ideology influence the adaptation and appropriation of a
canonical author’s life and oeuvre? How do the portraits of authors
in fiction reflect both scholarly receptions and societal developments?
* To take the example of biopics, these have existed in fact since the
very beginnings of cinema itself. In what way has the genre evolved
over time and to what extent is there (or not) a privileged
relationship between postmodernism and the biopic? Can the same
question be raised concerning biofiction?
This publication fosters a dialogue between different approaches and
fields: literarity, cultural studies, film studies, transmediality and
visual culture. We would like the book chapters to address the topic of
authors as characters in fiction, film from the perspectives of
production and reception. Lucasta Miller defined ‘afterlife studies’ as
‘a form of critical enquiry which can interrogate the intersection
between real lives and their cultural construction, both within the
lifetime of the subject and posthumously’ (2014). The current abundance
of author-as-character productions provides an opportunity to redefine
the emerging critical concept of ‘literary afterlives’ as past authorial
figures continue to be transposed to new literary, visual and cultural
contexts, and their past oeuvres are repurposed to be consumed by new
audiences. The continuous reinvention of authors as characters in
fiction, film and graphic narratives reinforces their canonical literary
status, rejuvenates critical interpretations and augments their cultural
capital in the twenty-first century.
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