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Depoliticising literature, politicising diversity: ethno-racial boundaries in Dutch literary professionals’ aesthetic repertoires

Depoliticising literature, politicising diversity: ethno-racial boundaries in Dutch literary professionals’ aesthetic repertoires
Depoliticising literature, politicising diversity: ethno-racial boundaries in Dutch literary professionals’ aesthetic repertoires
Although still a neglected area, over the years a growing body of sociological research on the position of ethno-racial minorities in Western artistic fields has emerged. With this article we aim to contribute to this research area by focusing on ethno-racial diversity in the Dutch literary field. Through in-depth interviews, we analyse how gatekeepers mobilise specific cultural repertoires and by doing so draw ethno-racial boundaries when discussing acquisition, assessing quality and positioning themselves in the literary field. We argue that literary publishers and other professionals (selectively) employ an ‘old school’ modernist repertoire that especially values the formal aspects of literary products, by which non-white writers and publishers concerned with diversity are often positioned in an identity politics framework. Their work is said to take in a less prestigious ‘political’/’subjective’ position rather than a ‘literary’/‘universal’ one. As such, this paper informs on how gatekeepers’ practices shape the position of non-white authors in the Dutch literary field.
1070-289X
1-19
Koren, Timo
cfa6121c-03e3-430f-b380-f20afbd5a6c8
Delhaye, Christine
82f77a35-f0d6-4a47-ab16-934acbef01a2
Koren, Timo
cfa6121c-03e3-430f-b380-f20afbd5a6c8
Delhaye, Christine
82f77a35-f0d6-4a47-ab16-934acbef01a2

Koren, Timo and Delhaye, Christine (2017) Depoliticising literature, politicising diversity: ethno-racial boundaries in Dutch literary professionals’ aesthetic repertoires. Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power, 1-19. (doi:10.1080/1070289X.2017.1391561).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Although still a neglected area, over the years a growing body of sociological research on the position of ethno-racial minorities in Western artistic fields has emerged. With this article we aim to contribute to this research area by focusing on ethno-racial diversity in the Dutch literary field. Through in-depth interviews, we analyse how gatekeepers mobilise specific cultural repertoires and by doing so draw ethno-racial boundaries when discussing acquisition, assessing quality and positioning themselves in the literary field. We argue that literary publishers and other professionals (selectively) employ an ‘old school’ modernist repertoire that especially values the formal aspects of literary products, by which non-white writers and publishers concerned with diversity are often positioned in an identity politics framework. Their work is said to take in a less prestigious ‘political’/’subjective’ position rather than a ‘literary’/‘universal’ one. As such, this paper informs on how gatekeepers’ practices shape the position of non-white authors in the Dutch literary field.

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Accepted/In Press date: 9 October 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 November 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 424367
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/424367
ISSN: 1070-289X
PURE UUID: 21407431-92bd-48c3-a9eb-8bc94cc14553

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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2018 11:36
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 21:31

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Contributors

Author: Timo Koren
Author: Christine Delhaye

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