Kings Of The Jungle Essay, Research Paper
Kings of the jungleIn the ecosystem of publishing, the literary agent is a comparatively new phenomenon. Printers, booksellers, editors and publishers: all can trace their roots to Caxton. Agents, by contrast, are seen as interlopers, half man, half beast, whose place at the water-hole has, historically, not been greeted with universal approbation.Only 100 years ago, the first literary agent, JB Pinker, who represented Wilde, Conrad, Wells and James, was regarded by London’s publishers with fear and suspicion. What right, they asked, had this impostor to interfere with the sacred author-publisher relationship? How dare Mr Pinker presume to negotiate terms on behalf of ‘their’ authors?Pinker, a pioneer, was a symptom as much as a cause. As the marketplace for new writing expanded in the aftermath of the 1870 Education Act, a new class of professional writer (Conan Doyle, JM Barrie, Arnold Bennett) was emerging who needed a representative to look after their interests.Pinker was followed by Messrs AP Watt, Curtis Brown and AD Peters, names that survive, more or less unchanged, to the present.Something else didn’t change much, either. At least until the 1970s, publishers continued to regard agents with contempt. Some of them actually refused to consider a book if it arrived via an agent. The book trade was dominated by a generation of senior publishers, well-lunched men and women in their fifties and sixties, who considered agents to be little better than stick-up merchants in flashy clothes.Slowly, the role of the agent became respectable. Occasionally, publisher’s editors, disillusioned with, or rejected by, the business, would swap gamekeeping for poaching and set up as independent agents before retiring into obscurity. Until recently, this migration lacked any larger significance.But deep in the book jungle, there were new stirrings. During the 1980s, as publishing reorganised itself into to corporate megaliths, the smarter literary agencies began to follow suit. AD Peters merged with theatrical agents Fraser and Dunlop to become PFD. A crucial new alliance established Rogers, Coleridge & White; Curtis Brown absorbed John Farquharson. And so on.Now, if you were a writer represented by one of these companies, you could have an agent who, having sold book rights in Englis
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