Att förhandla litterärt värde – Sami Said och Väldigt sällan fin
Författare
Summary, in English
This article aims to highlight how literary value is constructed today: how it is created and negotiated. It seeks to develop a perspective that considers the manifold and complex valuenegotiation process. In accordance with Barbara Herrnstein Smith, the article argues that literary value is generated by a constant and continuous series of negotiations between production and sale: the institutions, groups of readers, and individuals who are part of the valuemaking process. A number of different values circulate among different stakeholders – trade, educational, aesthetic, personal, and so on – and the negotiations take place in accordance with the dictates of the respective needs, interests, and resources of these stakeholders. While Barbara Herrnstein Smith’s theories on literary value remain influential, they have rarely been tested empirically. The basic premise of the article is that the process of value creation has to be discussed from new perspectives based on empirical research.
The article presents a case study of the Swedish author Sami Said’s literary debut – the critically acclaimed Väldigt sällan fin – and the negotiation process before and after its publication. The fact that Said was unknown at the time of his debut most likely foregrounded the visible negotiation of literary value in his case, but we believe that the process can be seen as an example of a continual and ongoing practise in the literary sphere as a whole. The analysis shows that different agents claimed values and positions both in relation to the book and to each other. For example, marketing and publishing paratexts emphasised values of knowledge, institutionalised literary criticism valued the aesthetic qualities of the novel, while readers writing on the Internet took a more emotional and subjective position. The valuation also went backandforth between reading the novel as expressing a particular, nonSwedish experience with biographical overtones, and understanding it as manifesting universal existential values.
The article presents a case study of the Swedish author Sami Said’s literary debut – the critically acclaimed Väldigt sällan fin – and the negotiation process before and after its publication. The fact that Said was unknown at the time of his debut most likely foregrounded the visible negotiation of literary value in his case, but we believe that the process can be seen as an example of a continual and ongoing practise in the literary sphere as a whole. The analysis shows that different agents claimed values and positions both in relation to the book and to each other. For example, marketing and publishing paratexts emphasised values of knowledge, institutionalised literary criticism valued the aesthetic qualities of the novel, while readers writing on the Internet took a more emotional and subjective position. The valuation also went backandforth between reading the novel as expressing a particular, nonSwedish experience with biographical overtones, and understanding it as manifesting universal existential values.
Avdelning/ar
Publiceringsår
2013
Språk
Svenska
Sidor
121-134
Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie
Tidskrift för litteraturvetenskap
Issue
4
Fulltext
Dokumenttyp
Artikel i tidskrift
Förlag
Föreningen för utgivande av Tidskrift för litteraturvetenskap
Ämne
- General Literature Studies
Nyckelord
- literary value
- Sami Said
- literary criticism
- reception studies
- Barbara Herrnstein Smith
Status
Published
Projekt
- Negotiating Literary Value – Sweden 2013
- FOLIO - Forum för litteraturens offentligheter
Forskningsgrupp
- FOLIO - Forum för litteraturens offentligheter
ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt
- ISSN: 1104-0556