Popular Authorship Reconfigured: Stephen King’s Authorial Personae from Print to Digital Environments

Authors

  • Despoina Feleki Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v3i1.1071

Keywords:

authorship, Stephen King, digital culture, print, celebrity, fiction, Despoina Feleki

Abstract

The convergence of literary practices with computer information technologies (ICTs) has immensely affected writing processes and theories of authorship. This paper aims to foreground contemporary sociocultural conditions which have reconfigured authorship in relation to the materiality of the product through the example of Stephen King’s writing and marketing choices. An investigation of selected printed and digital works, including Misery, Lisey’s Story, Duma’s Key, and UR, showcases King’s concern for the future of authorship in the digital age and the position of the writer in the book and entertainment industries. This article seeks to trace the trajectory of the concept of the author who is seen moving from print to digital environments and being entangled in new forms of communication with the reader. In particular, King, who leaves control of the narrative story to experts in digital mediation, takes advantage of the new medium’s immediacy, comes closer to the recipients of his works, and manages to re-invent his authorial image while his name turns into a brand.

Author Biography

Despoina Feleki, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

Despoina Feleki is an appointed English Educator, moving towards the completion of her PhD studies in the sector of Contemporary American Studies in the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Her latest research interests include popular cultural studies, new media and writing technologies as well as the effects of digitality on education. Feleki has presented findings of her research in conferences in Oxford, Ghent, Florence and Thessaloniki, and is a regular review contributor to the online European Journal of American Studies. Her other book reviews appear in the 49th Parallel online journal and in American Studies Today. Other articles appear in the online journal Writing Technologies by Nottingham Trent University and in the conference proceedings of the 5th ICT Conference in Florence.

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Published

2014-03-31

How to Cite

Feleki, D. (2014). Popular Authorship Reconfigured: Stephen King’s Authorial Personae from Print to Digital Environments. uthorship, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.21825/aj.v3i1.1071

Issue

Section

Special Topic: Reconfiguring Authorship