Biblio-file
Selections from the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections
Library
Collaborative Literature
Joseph
Conrad
© Bettmann / CORBIS
Ford
Madox Ford
© E.O. Hoppè / CORBIS |
Poets sharing rhymes, novelists drafting
fiction together--projects like these actually predate the
digital age and our modern culture of collaboration.
Indeed, a newly acquired collection demonstrates that literary
collaboration has been a tool employed by writers for hundreds
of years.
Early in the eighteenth century, Thomas Burnet and George
Duckett collaboratively wrote and published a satirical story.
By the end of the century, William Wordsworth and Samuel
Taylor Coleridge were working in partnership, writing and
collecting poems that they issued anonymously under the title
Lyrical Ballads. This work, one of the most important publications
of the nascent Romantic movement, is also one of the most
celebrated early examples of collaborative literature.
As publishing and readership exploded in the nineteenth and
early-twentieth century, so, too, did literary collaboration.
A broad array of traditional literature, popular novels,
and fiction intended for a juvenile audience was produced
by two or more authors working together. An excellent example
from the early-twentieth century is the short series of novels
Joseph Conrad wrote in cooperation with Ford Madox Ford.
Conrad produced these collaborative novels at the same time
that he was also working independently on other publications.
The stories and methods of the collaborations are as varied
as the finished works themselves. There have been collaborations
between husband and wife, siblings, parents and children,
and two or more established writers, as well as many other
combinations. In the resulting works, numerous decisions,
negotiations, and internal divisions are resolved.
The library's new collection of collaborative literature,
which encompasses more than 400 works published from the
eighteenth to the early-twentieth century, promises to be
a rich resource for future scholarship.
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