Difference between revisions of "2008-09 MM The Booker Prize 2008 and the Culture of Literary Prizes"

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!bgcolor=#FFFF80|[http://www.commonwealthfoundation.com/culturediversity/writersprize/cwp/2009%20prize/2009list/ Adiga, Hensher, Rushdie and Hanif shortlisted for Commonwealth Writers' Regional Prize]
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* Lecturers: [[User: Anton Kirchhofer|Anton Kirchhofer]] and [[User:Anna Auguscik|Anna Auguscik]]
 
* Lecturers: [[User: Anton Kirchhofer|Anton Kirchhofer]] and [[User:Anna Auguscik|Anna Auguscik]]
 
* '''Time:''' Tuesdays, 2-4pm
 
* '''Time:''' Tuesdays, 2-4pm
 
* '''Venue:''' A1 0-004
 
* '''Venue:''' A1 0-004
  
==Course Description==
+
*'''Course Description'''
This course will offer an opportunity to explore the culture of literary prizes in Anglophone fiction on the example of the Man Booker Prize 2008. As UK's most prestigious literary prize celebrates its 40th anniversary, the course will introduce students to the main issues and developments of the Booker 2008, and invite them to analyse its background on four levels: textual analysis, marketing, reviewing and prize coverage. By the beginning of term, students should have purchased and read the six novels on the 2008 Booker shortlist.  
+
This course will offer an opportunity to explore the culture of literary prizes in Anglophone fiction on the example of the Man Booker Prize 2008. As UK's most prestigious literary prize celebrates its 40th anniversary, the course will introduce students to the main issues and developments of the Booker 2008, and invite them to analyze its background on four levels: textual analysis, marketing, reviewing and prize coverage. By the beginning of term, students should have purchased and read the six novels on the 2008 Booker shortlist:
 +
 
 +
*Aravind Adiga, The White Tiger (2008) - Atlantic
 +
*Sebastian Barry, The Secret Scripture (2008) - Faber and Faber
 +
*Amitav Ghosh, Sea of Poppies (2008) - John Murray (Ibis Trilogy, book 1)
 +
*Linda Grant, The Clothes on Their Backs (2008) - Virago
 +
*Philip Hensher, The Northern Clemency (2008) - Fourth Estate
 +
*Steve Toltz, A Fraction of the Whole (2008) - Hamish Hamilton
 +
 
 +
We recommend the course to be attended in combination with Delia Duncan's "Academic Discourse in Literature: The Booker Prize 2008: selected readings" (3.02.516), Fr 10 - 12, A06 0-004.
  
 
For a preliminary seminar plan, see below.  
 
For a preliminary seminar plan, see below.  
Line 16: Line 30:
 
'''Important Dates''':
 
'''Important Dates''':
 
*The judging panel: announcement on 18 December 2007
 
*The judging panel: announcement on 18 December 2007
*The longlist: announcement on 29 July 2008
+
*The longlist: announcement on 29 July 2008  
*The shortlist: announcement 9 September 2008
+
*The shortlist: announcement 9 September 2008 at a press conference at Man Group's London office
*The winner: announcement on 14 October 2008.
+
*The winner: announcement on 14 October 2008 at an awards ceremony at Guildhall, London (televised live on the BBC Ten O’Clock News)
  
 
Click on [[Booker Prize]] for more information on the award.
 
Click on [[Booker Prize]] for more information on the award.
  
===Requirements===
+
*'''Requirements'''
'''Course Requirements for credits as a Master Module "English Literatures":'''
+
:*'''Course Requirements for credits as a Master Module "English Literatures":'''
 
#Regular attendance (you may miss up to two meetings, whatever the reasons) and
 
#Regular attendance (you may miss up to two meetings, whatever the reasons) and
 
#active participation  
 
#active participation  
Line 31: Line 45:
 
#Additionally, for students of the MA English Studies, a research project  
 
#Additionally, for students of the MA English Studies, a research project  
  
'''Requirements for candidates for the Staatsexamenklausur:'''
+
:*'''Requirements for candidates for the Staatsexamenklausur:'''
 
#Regular attendance and active participation.
 
#Regular attendance and active participation.
 
#A contribution to one of the "expert groups" which discuss the similarities and differences in textual analysis, marketing, reviewing and prize coverage for all six novels. Alternatively, you may join a group that produces short summaries of the seminar meetings which help you revise for the written exam.
 
#A contribution to one of the "expert groups" which discuss the similarities and differences in textual analysis, marketing, reviewing and prize coverage for all six novels. Alternatively, you may join a group that produces short summaries of the seminar meetings which help you revise for the written exam.
 +
  
 
==14.10.2008==
 
==14.10.2008==
Introduction and Discussion of Booker Web Site
+
Booker Prize: Introduction and Discussion
  
Exeptional first meeting together with Delia Duncan's course (if possible, a kick-off evening together to mark the announcement of the winner of the 2008 Man Booker Prize). Details to follow.
+
'''Plan'''
 +
# Purpose of the course, organization and questions
 +
# Links and resources
 +
# Judging the Booker by covers
 +
# Discussion and opinions about literary prizes
 +
# Placing tips on a winner
  
 
==21.10.2008==
 
==21.10.2008==
Theory and Secondary Materials
+
Culture and Economics of Literary Prizes
 +
 
 +
'''Reading'''
 +
*James F. English (2002) - overview
 +
:*The model which English uses and criticizes comes from Pierre Bourdieu, ''The Field of Cultural Production'' (1993). For a better understanding, you can look up the graphic on p.104 in an extract of that book as quoted in [http://www.uni-oldenburg.de/anglistik/lit-wiss/intro-to-literature/d/1993_bourdieu_cultural_production.pdf David Finkelstein and Alistair McCleery (Eds.). ''The Book History''. Routledge, ²2008.]
 +
*Victor Ginsburgh (2003) - statistics
  
 
==28.10.2008==
 
==28.10.2008==
Theory and Secondary Materials
+
Booker History and Booker Critique
 +
 
 +
'''Reading'''
 +
*Richard Todd (1996) - information, anecdotes and perspectives
 +
*Graham Huggan (1997) - argues from a theoretical perspective and formulates a specific critique
  
 
==04.11.2008==
 
==04.11.2008==
Novel 1: Textual Analysis, Marketing, and Reviewing
+
meeting postponed!
 
+
==14.11.2008==
+
Novel 2: Textual Analysis, Marketing, and Reviewing
+
  
 +
==11.11.2008==
 +
meeting postponed!
 +
 
==18.11.2008==
 
==18.11.2008==
Novel 3: Textual Analysis, Marketing, and Reviewing
+
A First Approach to the Novels: Textual Analysis, Marketing, Reviewing
 +
Aravind Adiga's ''The White Tiger''
 +
*Textual Analysis: Kerry Lee Achenbach
 +
*Marketing and Reviewing: Imke-Silja Hintze
  
 
==25.11.2008==
 
==25.11.2008==
Novel 4: Textual Analysis, Marketing, and Reviewing
+
A First Approach to the Novels: Textual Analysis, Marketing, Reviewing
 +
Migration, Gender, Dress, Identity: Linda Grant's ''The Clothes on Their Backs''
 +
*Textual Analysis: Anja Maria Sempt
 +
*Marketing and Reviewing: Danica Grade
  
 
==02.12.2008==
 
==02.12.2008==
Novel 5: Textual Analysis, Marketing, and Reviewing
+
A First Approach to the Novels: Textual Analysis, Marketing, Reviewing
 +
[[Sebastian Barry, The Secret Scripture (2008)|Sebastian Barry's ''The Secret Scripture'']]
 +
*Textual Analysis: Jenna Louise Hartmann
 +
*Marketing and Reviewing: Nadine Moehlmann
  
 
==09.12.2008==
 
==09.12.2008==
Novel 6: Textual Analysis, Marketing, and Reviewing
+
A First Approach to the Novels: Textual Analysis, Marketing, Reviewing
 +
Amitav Ghosh's ''Sea of Poppies''
 +
*Textual Analysis: Franziska Felbermair
 +
*Marketing and Reviewing: Markus Friedel
  
 
==16.12.2008==
 
==16.12.2008==
Close Reading: Textual Analysis I
+
A First Approach to the Novels: Textual Analysis, Marketing, Reviewing
 +
Philip Hensher's ''The Northern Clemency''
 +
*Textual Analysis: Christian Ueckert
 +
*Marketing and Reviewing: Hannah Ina Dasecke
  
 
==06.01.2009==
 
==06.01.2009==
Close Reading: Textual Analysis II
+
A First Approach to the Novels: Textual Analysis, Marketing, Reviewing
 +
Steve Toltz's ''A Fraction of the Whole''
 +
*Textual Analysis: Julia Nadine Kruska
 +
*Marketing and Reviewing: Swantje Mahn
  
 
==13.01.2009==
 
==13.01.2009==
Marketing
+
Expert Group 1: Textual Analysis, Close Reading
  
 
==20.01.2009==
 
==20.01.2009==
Reviewing<br>
+
Expert Group 2: Textual Analysis, Close Reading
Course Evaluation.
+
  
 
==27.01.2009==
 
==27.01.2009==
Outlook: Theory Revisited.<br>
+
Expert Group 3: Marketing and Reviewing
Feedback on course Evaluation.
+
*Course Evaluation
 +
 
 +
==31.01.2009==
 +
10.00-13.15h
 +
Expert Group 4: Marketing and Reviewing
 +
*Outlook: Theory Revisited
 +
*Feedback on course Evaluation.
 +
 
 +
==Reading Help==
 +
Some thoughts to support your reading experience:
 +
*Literary studies routine questions: narration, characterization, plot construction
 +
*What kind of discussions are triggered? What are the main themes?
 +
*Are there any intertextual allusions - explicit/implicit?
 +
*Production/ marketing history: When/where published? Published as novel/thriller? Interesting cover/ blurbs?
 +
*What was your direct reaction after/during your reading? Justified nomination for Booker Prize?
 +
*How did others react? Reviews, blogs...
  
 
==Reader==
 
==Reader==
*English, James F. 2005. ''The Economy of Prestige. Prizes, Awards, and the Circulation of Cultural Value''. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard UP. (Esp. Chapter 9: "The New Rhetoric of Prize Commentary." 197-216.)
+
*[http://www.uni-oldenburg.de/anglistik/lit-wiss/intro-to-literature/booker/Reader_MM_Booker_Prize_2008.pdf Reader]  contains:
*[http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/06/books/review/006MARKOV.html?pagewanted=print&position= Markovits, Benjamin. 2005 (March 6). "Prize Fight." ''New York Times Book Review''. 27.]
+
#Huggan, Graham. 1994. "The Postcolonial Exotic: Salman Rushdie and the Booker of Bookers." ''Transition'' 64: 22-29.
*[http://www.uni-oldenburg.de/anglistik/lit-wiss/intro-to-literature/booker/2003_ginsburgh_awards.pdf Ginsburgh, Victor. 2003. "Awards, Success and Aesthetic Quality in the Arts." ''The Journal of Economic Perspectives'' 17.2 (Spring): 99-111.]
+
#Todd, Richard. 1996. ''Consuming Fictions: The Booker Prize and Fiction in Britain Today''. London, England: Bloomsbury. (Chapter 2: "Literary Prizes and the Media." 55-94.)
*English, James F. 2002. "Winning the Culture Game: Prizes, Awards, and the Rules of Art." ''New Literary History: A Journal of Theory and Interpretation'' 33.1 (Winter): 109-35.
+
#Huggan, Graham. 1997. "Prizing 'Otherness': A Short History of the Booker." ''Studies in the Novel'' 29.3 (Fall): 412-33.
*[http://www.uni-oldenburg.de/anglistik/lit-wiss/intro-to-literature/booker/2002_showalter_booker.pdf Showalter, Elaine. 2002. "Coming to Blows over the Booker Prize." ''Chronicle of Higher Education'' 48.42 (June 28): B11.]
+
#English, James F. 2002. "Winning the Culture Game: Prizes, Awards, and the Rules of Art." ''New Literary History: A Journal of Theory and Interpretation'' 33.1 (Winter): 109-35.
*Strongman, Luke. 2002. ''The Booker Prize and the Legacy of Empire''. Cross/Cultures: Readings in the Post/Colonial Literatures in English 54. Amsterdam: Rodopi.
+
#Showalter, Elaine. 2002. "Coming to Blows over the Booker Prize." ''Chronicle of Higher Education'' 48.42 (June 28): B11.
*Huggan, Graham. 2001. ''The Postcolonial Exotic. Marketing the Margins''. London and New York: Routledge.
+
#Strongman, Luke. 2002. ''The Booker Prize and the Legacy of Empire''. Cross/Cultures: Readings in the Post/Colonial Literatures in English 54. Amsterdam: Rodopi. (ToC, Intro, Conclusion)
*[http://www.uni-oldenburg.de/anglistik/lit-wiss/intro-to-literature/booker/1997_huggan_otherness.pdf Huggan, Graham. 1997. "Prizing 'Otherness': A Short History of the Booker." ''Studies in the Novel'' 29.3 (Fall):412-33.]
+
#Ginsburgh, Victor. 2003. "Awards, Success and Aesthetic Quality in the Arts." ''The Journal of Economic Perspectives'' 17.2 (Spring): 99-111.
*Todd, Richard. 1996. ''Consuming Fictions: The Booker Prize and Fiction in Britain Today''. London, England: Bloomsbury. (Esp. Chapter 2: "Literary Prizes and the Media." 55-94.)
+
#Squires, Claire. 2004. "A Common Ground? Book Prize Culture in Europe." ''Javnost: The Public'' 11.4: 37-47.
*[http://www.uni-oldenburg.de/anglistik/lit-wiss/intro-to-literature/booker/1994_huggan_exotic.pdf Huggan, Graham. 1994. "The Postcolonial Exotic: Salman Rushdie and the Booker of Bookers." ''Transition'' 64: 22-29.]
+
#English, James F. 2005. ''The Economy of Prestige. Prizes, Awards, and the Circulation of Cultural Value''. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard UP. ( Chapter 9: "The New Rhetoric of Prize Commentary." 197-216.)
 +
#Markovits, Benjamin. 2005 (March 6). "Prize Fight." ''New York Times Book Review''. 27.
 +
 
 +
==Further Reading==
 +
*Street, John. 2005. "'Showbusiness of a Serious Kind': A Cultural Politics of the Arts Prize." ''Media, Culture & Society'' 27 (November): 819-840. [http://mcs.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/27/6/819?etoc (Abstract)]
 +
*Huggan, Graham. 2001. ''The Postcolonial Exotic. Marketing the Margins''. London and New York: Routledge. [http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0650/00045937-d.html Publisher description]
 +
 
 +
==Links and Resources==
 +
*Booker Website
 +
:*[http://www.themanbookerprize.com/ The Man Booker Prize Homepage]
 +
:*[http://www.themanbookerprize.com/news/blog-chair-08 Man Booker Prize, Chair's Blog]
 +
:*[http://www.themanbookerprize.com/news/blog-judges-08 Man Booker Prize, Judges' Blog]
 +
*Publishers
 +
:*[http://www.atlantic-books.co.uk Atlantic Books], an imprint of Grove Atlantic Limited, one of America’s oldest independent literary publishers
 +
:*[http://www.faber.co.uk/ Faber and Faber], a UK independent publisher
 +
:*[http://www.hachettelivre.co.uk/Publishers/johnmurray John Murray at Hachette UK], part of the Hachette Group, itself part of Lagardère Group
 +
:*[http://www.virago.co.uk/ Virago Press], an imprint of Little, Brown; itself part of Hachette Livre
 +
:*[http://www.harpercollins.com/authors/14888/Fourth_Estate/index.aspx Fourth Estate], an imprint of HarperCollins, part of News Corporation
 +
:*[http://www.hamishhamilton.co.uk/ Hamish Hamilton], an imprint of Penguin General
 +
*Newspapers
 +
:*[http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/ The Times and Sunday Times]
 +
:*[http://www.guardian.co.uk/ Guardian] and [http://observer.guardian.co.uk/ Observer]
 +
:*[http://www.independent.co.uk/ The Independent and The Independent on Sunday]
 +
:*[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph]
  
==Links==
 
*[http://www.themanbookerprize.com/ The Man Booker Prize Homepage]
 
*[http://www.themanbookerprize.com/news/blog-chair-08 Man Booker Prize, Chair's Blog]
 
*[http://www.themanbookerprize.com/news/blog-judges-08 Man Booker Prize, Judges' Blog]
 
  
[[Category:Winter 2008-09]]
+
[[Category:Winter 2008-2009|2009-1]]
 
[[Category:Mastermodul]]
 
[[Category:Mastermodul]]

Latest revision as of 09:59, 19 February 2009

Adiga, Hensher, Rushdie and Hanif shortlisted for Commonwealth Writers' Regional Prize


  • Course Description

This course will offer an opportunity to explore the culture of literary prizes in Anglophone fiction on the example of the Man Booker Prize 2008. As UK's most prestigious literary prize celebrates its 40th anniversary, the course will introduce students to the main issues and developments of the Booker 2008, and invite them to analyze its background on four levels: textual analysis, marketing, reviewing and prize coverage. By the beginning of term, students should have purchased and read the six novels on the 2008 Booker shortlist:

  • Aravind Adiga, The White Tiger (2008) - Atlantic
  • Sebastian Barry, The Secret Scripture (2008) - Faber and Faber
  • Amitav Ghosh, Sea of Poppies (2008) - John Murray (Ibis Trilogy, book 1)
  • Linda Grant, The Clothes on Their Backs (2008) - Virago
  • Philip Hensher, The Northern Clemency (2008) - Fourth Estate
  • Steve Toltz, A Fraction of the Whole (2008) - Hamish Hamilton

We recommend the course to be attended in combination with Delia Duncan's "Academic Discourse in Literature: The Booker Prize 2008: selected readings" (3.02.516), Fr 10 - 12, A06 0-004.

For a preliminary seminar plan, see below.

A reader with secondary sources will be made available around the middle of September. A number of essays can already be downloaded from the links below. (Please, contact us if you do not yet have the password.)

The thirteen novels of the Booker longlist as well as a number of important books will be in the Handapparat in the University Library from the middle of August.

Please, sign up to the Booker mailinglist, check out the Booker website and be aware of the following —

Important Dates:

  • The judging panel: announcement on 18 December 2007
  • The longlist: announcement on 29 July 2008
  • The shortlist: announcement 9 September 2008 at a press conference at Man Group's London office
  • The winner: announcement on 14 October 2008 at an awards ceremony at Guildhall, London (televised live on the BBC Ten O’Clock News)

Click on Booker Prize for more information on the award.

  • Requirements
  • Course Requirements for credits as a Master Module "English Literatures":
  1. Regular attendance (you may miss up to two meetings, whatever the reasons) and
  2. active participation
  3. An oral presentation of max. 30 minutes to introduce the seminar discussion of one of the six novels
  4. A contribution to one of the "expert groups" which discuss the similarities and differences in textual analysis, marketing, reviewing and prize coverage for all six novels
  5. A term paper (generally dealing with one or several of the issues raised in your oral contribution; length ca. 15-20 pages for M.Ed.Gym.; 10-12 pages for M.Ed.WiPaed.; deadline 1 March 2009).
  6. Additionally, for students of the MA English Studies, a research project
  • Requirements for candidates for the Staatsexamenklausur:
  1. Regular attendance and active participation.
  2. A contribution to one of the "expert groups" which discuss the similarities and differences in textual analysis, marketing, reviewing and prize coverage for all six novels. Alternatively, you may join a group that produces short summaries of the seminar meetings which help you revise for the written exam.


14.10.2008

Booker Prize: Introduction and Discussion

Plan

  1. Purpose of the course, organization and questions
  2. Links and resources
  3. Judging the Booker by covers
  4. Discussion and opinions about literary prizes
  5. Placing tips on a winner

21.10.2008

Culture and Economics of Literary Prizes

Reading

  • James F. English (2002) - overview
  • Victor Ginsburgh (2003) - statistics

28.10.2008

Booker History and Booker Critique

Reading

  • Richard Todd (1996) - information, anecdotes and perspectives
  • Graham Huggan (1997) - argues from a theoretical perspective and formulates a specific critique

04.11.2008

meeting postponed!

11.11.2008

meeting postponed!

18.11.2008

A First Approach to the Novels: Textual Analysis, Marketing, Reviewing

Aravind Adiga's The White Tiger
  • Textual Analysis: Kerry Lee Achenbach
  • Marketing and Reviewing: Imke-Silja Hintze

25.11.2008

A First Approach to the Novels: Textual Analysis, Marketing, Reviewing

Migration, Gender, Dress, Identity: Linda Grant's The Clothes on Their Backs
  • Textual Analysis: Anja Maria Sempt
  • Marketing and Reviewing: Danica Grade

02.12.2008

A First Approach to the Novels: Textual Analysis, Marketing, Reviewing

Sebastian Barry's The Secret Scripture
  • Textual Analysis: Jenna Louise Hartmann
  • Marketing and Reviewing: Nadine Moehlmann

09.12.2008

A First Approach to the Novels: Textual Analysis, Marketing, Reviewing

Amitav Ghosh's Sea of Poppies
  • Textual Analysis: Franziska Felbermair
  • Marketing and Reviewing: Markus Friedel

16.12.2008

A First Approach to the Novels: Textual Analysis, Marketing, Reviewing

Philip Hensher's The Northern Clemency
  • Textual Analysis: Christian Ueckert
  • Marketing and Reviewing: Hannah Ina Dasecke

06.01.2009

A First Approach to the Novels: Textual Analysis, Marketing, Reviewing

Steve Toltz's A Fraction of the Whole
  • Textual Analysis: Julia Nadine Kruska
  • Marketing and Reviewing: Swantje Mahn

13.01.2009

Expert Group 1: Textual Analysis, Close Reading 

20.01.2009

Expert Group 2: Textual Analysis, Close Reading 

27.01.2009

Expert Group 3: Marketing and Reviewing
  • Course Evaluation

31.01.2009

10.00-13.15h

Expert Group 4: Marketing and Reviewing
  • Outlook: Theory Revisited
  • Feedback on course Evaluation.

Reading Help

Some thoughts to support your reading experience:

  • Literary studies routine questions: narration, characterization, plot construction
  • What kind of discussions are triggered? What are the main themes?
  • Are there any intertextual allusions - explicit/implicit?
  • Production/ marketing history: When/where published? Published as novel/thriller? Interesting cover/ blurbs?
  • What was your direct reaction after/during your reading? Justified nomination for Booker Prize?
  • How did others react? Reviews, blogs...

Reader

  1. Huggan, Graham. 1994. "The Postcolonial Exotic: Salman Rushdie and the Booker of Bookers." Transition 64: 22-29.
  2. Todd, Richard. 1996. Consuming Fictions: The Booker Prize and Fiction in Britain Today. London, England: Bloomsbury. (Chapter 2: "Literary Prizes and the Media." 55-94.)
  3. Huggan, Graham. 1997. "Prizing 'Otherness': A Short History of the Booker." Studies in the Novel 29.3 (Fall): 412-33.
  4. English, James F. 2002. "Winning the Culture Game: Prizes, Awards, and the Rules of Art." New Literary History: A Journal of Theory and Interpretation 33.1 (Winter): 109-35.
  5. Showalter, Elaine. 2002. "Coming to Blows over the Booker Prize." Chronicle of Higher Education 48.42 (June 28): B11.
  6. Strongman, Luke. 2002. The Booker Prize and the Legacy of Empire. Cross/Cultures: Readings in the Post/Colonial Literatures in English 54. Amsterdam: Rodopi. (ToC, Intro, Conclusion)
  7. Ginsburgh, Victor. 2003. "Awards, Success and Aesthetic Quality in the Arts." The Journal of Economic Perspectives 17.2 (Spring): 99-111.
  8. Squires, Claire. 2004. "A Common Ground? Book Prize Culture in Europe." Javnost: The Public 11.4: 37-47.
  9. English, James F. 2005. The Economy of Prestige. Prizes, Awards, and the Circulation of Cultural Value. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard UP. ( Chapter 9: "The New Rhetoric of Prize Commentary." 197-216.)
  10. Markovits, Benjamin. 2005 (March 6). "Prize Fight." New York Times Book Review. 27.

Further Reading

  • Street, John. 2005. "'Showbusiness of a Serious Kind': A Cultural Politics of the Arts Prize." Media, Culture & Society 27 (November): 819-840. (Abstract)
  • Huggan, Graham. 2001. The Postcolonial Exotic. Marketing the Margins. London and New York: Routledge. Publisher description

Links and Resources

  • Booker Website
  • Publishers
  • Newspapers