@inbook{a3f810b81d4041ab92fb742b402b9892,
title = "{"}Engagement: Authoring European Futures{"}",
abstract = "The idea of literary {\textquoteleft}engagement{\textquoteright}, first introduced to a wider public by Jean-Paul Sartre in the 1940s, is perhaps the most important twentieth-century contribution to our evolving understanding of authorship. The question of how authors should position themselves vis-{\`a}-vis the human conflicts of their day remains as pertinent as ever. In this chapter, Benedict Schofield analyses how two contemporary novelists—Robert Menasse and Ali Smith—have found distinctively twenty-first-century forms of literary engagement, transforming themselves into what Schofield calls {\textquoteleft}cultural statespeople{\textquoteright}. The works of Menasse and Smith cement their creators{\textquoteright} demands that they be taken seriously as literary authors, rather than as celebrities or even generic public intellectuals. Yet, both are deeply cognizant of the extra-literary factors that contribute to their popular appeal and use these to agitate for the strengthening and transformation of the European Union.",
keywords = "Authorship, Europe, European Union, Engagement, Politics",
author = "Schofield, {Benedict Keble}",
year = "2020",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198819653.013.10",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780198819653",
series = "Oxford 21st Century Handbooks",
publisher = "Oxford Univerity Press; Oxford",
pages = "132--147",
editor = "Rebecca Braun and Tobias Boes and Spiers, {Emily }",
booktitle = "Authors and the World",
}