Virago Press
Parent company | Hachette Livre |
---|---|
Founded | 1973 |
Founder | Carmen Callil |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Key people | Lennie Goodings (editor) |
Nonfiction topics | Feminism |
Official website | http://www.virago.co.uk/ |
Virago is a British publishing company.
History
Virago was founded in 1973 by Carmen Callil, primarily to publish books by women writers. Both new works and reissued books by neglected authors have featured on the imprint's list, as well as works with feminist themes by male authors such as H. G. Wells.
In 1982 Virago became a wholly owned subsidiary of the Chatto, Virago, Bodley Head, and Cape Group, but in 1987 Callil, Lennie Goodings, Ursula Owen, Alexandra Pringle, and Harriet Spicer put together a management buy-out from CVBC, then owned by Random House, USA. The buy-out was financed by Rothschild Ventures and Robert Gavron. Random House UK kept a ten per cent stake in the company, and continued to handle sales and distribution.
In 1993 Rothschild Ventures sold their shares to the directors and Gavron, who thus became the largest single shareholder. After a downturn in the market forced a reduction in activity, the board decided to sell the company to Little, Brown, of which Virago became an imprint in 1996 (with Lennie Goodings as Publisher and Sally Abbey as Senior Editor). In 2006, Virago's parent company became part of publishing group Hachette Livre. Lennie Goodings remains as editor and publisher.
Valentine Cunningham has praised Virago for trawling "most impressively and fruitfully in the novel catalogues" of the 1930s for women's fiction to reprint.[1]
Notes
- ↑ Cunningham, Valentine (1993), "Vin Rouge Audenaire?", in Cunningham, Valentine, British Writers Of The Thirties, Clarendon Press, p. 26, ISBN 9780192826558.
Further reading
- Riley, Catherine (2008). Do we still need Virago? Fragmenting Feminisms and the reflection of change through Women's Literary Output and Industry 1973–2007 (Ph.D. thesis). University of London. OCLC 940360989. Google preview.
- Riley, Catherine (2014). "'The Message Is in the Book': What Virago's Sale in 1995 Means for Feminist Publishing". Women: A Cultural Review. Taylor and Francis. 25 (3): 235–255. doi:10.1080/09574042.2011.561111.