04-27-2010, 12:17 PM | #16 | |
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If that's right then we still have literary critics, literary scholars and other writers, so there seems to be more or less the same mechanism available as there always was. Some of these literary scholars, writers and literary critics are even engaging with the question of what "new media" means for more traditional notions of literature and the aesthetics thereof. There is the problem of the sheer amount of stuff that gets put out now as compared with the past and I probably think that there is a bit of "the cream will rise to the top" sort of process. Most of the, ahem, non-literary fiction will have a very small readership, will not find itself reviewed in the TLS or the NYRB and will not be the subject of graduate theses in university literature departments so, in sense, it doesn't matter. As for the question of what literary heritage we want to pass on to our grandchildren - we'll only know that when we get there! |
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04-27-2010, 12:28 PM | #17 | |
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04-27-2010, 01:07 PM | #18 | |
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Everything else that a publisher does -- distribution, promotion (if you're lucky), etc, is irrelevant in the internet age. Both established and new writers can easily bypass them in order to reduce prices for consumers, and at the same time increase their own income from what they write. |
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04-27-2010, 01:17 PM | #19 | |
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With ebooks there is no real reason why you can't let people read half, most, or all of your book before they decide whether it is something they want to pay for or not. So if someone with similar tastes to you says "Hey, this book is above average", there would be nothing to lose by trying it. |
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04-27-2010, 01:48 PM | #20 | |
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The point I was making is that while it's perfectly possible for a self-published author to hire an editor, it's not a requirement. There's no way for me as a reader to know beforehand whether a self-published book was edited or not. I've read the slush pile, I don't want to pay for the privilege of doing it again. A good self-published book can be as good as anything from any major or minor house out there - a bad self-published book can be as bad if not worse than the worst product of my daughter's second grade class. That's a chance I'm not willing to take if I don't have to. As for bypassing the book trade and the existing distribution chain, that works brilliantly IF the author already has a name and following. It does not work as well for authors who do not already have the benefit of that level of public awareness. There will always be counter-examples, but they're the exception, not the rule. As of right now, the internet as a whole does not do as good a job of making sure that readers can expect a certain minimum level of writing competence in the books they buy as the publishing industry. |
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04-27-2010, 02:49 PM | #21 | |
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All they need to do is get people to look at their work. It won't be instant over night success, but then again very few traditionally published authors have done that either. The internet, and to a lesser extent self publishing/print on demand, will increase the amount of "bad" writing out there, but it shouldn't take more than a few pages to tell good from bad. They can also get feedback and advice from other writers as well as readers. |
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04-27-2010, 02:54 PM | #22 | |
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The Internet has fragmented reading and readers greatly, making it harder to build a consensus on what is great literature and what is dreck. |
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04-27-2010, 03:02 PM | #23 | |
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I personally think that, for example, J.D. Salinger is greatly overrated and David Weber is underrated, but I would also agree that as interesting a rewarding as I find David Weber's books, they are not great literature and Catcher in the Rye might be. Would you want your 12-year-old to study any book that his/her current teacher decided was a fun read or do you think there should be some literary standards applied when choosing the book? |
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04-27-2010, 03:22 PM | #24 | |
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04-27-2010, 03:23 PM | #25 | |
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04-27-2010, 04:21 PM | #26 | |
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But publishers do go through a lot of crap to choose the better books (and that is a scary thought) and we would need some new mechanism to do this without publishers. Depends on how you define literature. |
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04-27-2010, 04:21 PM | #27 | |
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04-27-2010, 04:29 PM | #28 | |
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Before the internet, I was much more selective, and generally stook to authors that I was already familiar with. |
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04-27-2010, 05:08 PM | #29 | |
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To see why, let's think a moment here about other kinds of content on the Internet. I'd be prepared to bet that any time you do a search on Google, well over 90% of the hits you retrieve are worthless. Even if they weren't, how would you ever find time to read through all of them? So clearly the junk to gems ratio on the Internet is extremely high - and yet no one wants or needs Internet gatekeepers, because we can decide what links we follow for ourselves. The same is true for books. Ultimately, the free market is perfectly able to decide what is and is not a good book without a gatekeeper to make that decision for us. I think that publishers served a vital role as facilitators in the past and continue to do so at present; whether they will continue to do so in the future- or whether they can even remain viable - is far from clear. As gatekeepers, however, they serve no useful purpose. Of course the quality of books from publishers is higher on average than independent books, because the publishers filter out much of the slush. But the free market doesn't really need a gatekeeper, and if the publishing industry ever reaches the point where its sole function is to act as such, it will become history. |
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04-27-2010, 05:16 PM | #30 |
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Publishers are the embarrassing dad of the creative community. They think they know what's hip and cool and what the kids want, but then they get drunk, start dancing and it isn't long before they're talking about how everything was much better in their day. Problem is they have the metaphorical keys to the car and most writers are still living under their metaphorical roof with not enough money (not metaphorical) to move into their own metaphorical place.
Last edited by Moejoe; 04-27-2010 at 05:20 PM. |
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