In:Literary Communication as Dialogue: Responsibilities and pleasures in post-postmodern times
Roger D. Sell
[FILLM Studies in Languages and Literatures 14] 2020
► pp. xi–xii
Acknowlegements
Published online: 24 November 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/fillm.14.ack
https://doi.org/10.1075/fillm.14.ack
Grateful acknowledgement is made to the following holders of copywright:-
Cankarjev dom, Ljubljana, for permission to reprint Roger D. Sell, “Encouraging the Readers of Tomorrow:
Books and Empathy,” from Book: The Bearer of Human Development (The World Book Summit: Ljubljana, 2011), 53–56.
de Gruyter, Berlin, for permission to reprint Roger D. Sell, “Postmodernity, literary pragmatics,
mediating criticism: Meanings within a large circle of communicants,” from Refeln der Bedeutung: Zur Theorie der Bedeutung
literarischer Text, eds Fotis Jannidis et al. (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2003), 103–127; and Roger D. Sell, “A communicational
criticism for post-postmodern times,” from Linguistics and literary studies: Interfaces, encounters, transfers, eds
Monika Fludernik and Daniel Jacob (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2014), 127–46.
Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, for permission to reprint Roger D. Sell, “Political and hedonic
re-contextualizations: Prince Charles’s Spanish journey in Beaumont, Jonson, and Middleton,” from The Ben Jonson Journal
22 (2015): 163–187 (The 2015 Ben Jonson Discoveries Award Essay).
Editions In Press, Paris, for permission to reprint Roger D. Sell, “What is literary communication and
what is a literary community?” from Emergent literatures and globalisation: Theory, society, politics, eds Sonia Faessel
and Michel Pérez (Paris: In Press Editions, 2004), 39–45.
ESSACHESS: Journal for Communication Studies, for permission to reprint Roger D. Sell,
“Cultural memory and the communicational criticism of literature,” from ESSACHESS: Journal for Communication Studies 5
(2012): 201–25 (https://www.essachess.com/index.php/jcs/article/view/ 176/158).
The John Benjamins Publishing Company, Amsterdam, for permission to reprint Roger D. Sell, “Dialogicality
and ethics: Four cases of literary address,” from Language and Dialogue 1 (2011): 79–104; Roger D. Sell, “Dialogue versus silencing: Coleridge’s The Rime of the Ancient
Mariner,” from Literary community-making: The dialogicality of English texts from the seventeenth century to the
present, ed. Roger D Sell (Amsterdam: Benjamins, 2012), 91–129; Roger D. Sell, “Herbert’s considerateness: A communicational assessment,” from The ethics of literary communication:
Genuineness, directness, indirectness, eds Roger D. Sell, Adam Borch, and Inna Lindgren (Amsterdam: Benjamins, 2013), 21–28;
Roger D. Sell, “In dialogue with the ageing Wordsworth,” from Literature as dialogue: Invitations offered and negotiated,
ed. Roger D. Sell (Amsterdam: Benjamins 2014), 161–176; Roger D. Sell, “Review: Till Kinzel and Jarmila Mildorf (eds), Imaginary
dialogues in American literature and philosophy: Beyond the mainstream,” from Language and Dialogue, 5 (2015):
340–347; and Roger D. Sell, “Ben Jonson’s Epigram 101, ‘Inviting a Friend to Supper’: Literary pleasures immediately tasted,” from
Renaissance Man: Essays of literature and culture for Anthony W. Johnson, eds Tommi Alho, Jason Finch and Roger D. Sell
(Amsterdam: Benjamins, 2019), 25–57.
Szczecin University Press, Szczecin, for permission to reprint Roger D. Sell, “Where do literary authors
belong? A post-postmodern answer,” from Rocznik Komparatystyczny: Comparative Yearbook 6 (2015): 47–68.
Taylor Francis Group LLC, Boca Raton, for permission to reprint Roger D. Sell, “Dialogue and literature,”
from The Routledge handbook of language and dialogue, ed. Edda Weigand (New York: Routledge, 2017), 127–142.
