Pit Schultz on Mon, 1 Jun 1998 20:53:17 +0200 (MET DST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> BIRD: IN DEFENSE OF SELF-PUBLISHING |
http://www.thefinger.com/ !go there - good site! BIRD IN DEFENSE OF SELF-PUBLISHING It's 1883, and a Connecticut eccentric with an assumed name -- whose scribblings strike his more Puritanical peers as degenerate and obscene -- asks a favor of a friend with access to a printing press at West Point. Hey, the writer pleads, if it's not too much trouble, and if no one's looking, would you mind running off 50 copies of a short story for me, so I can mail it to a few people? (This being the 19th century version of imposing on a pal who works at Kinko's for free color xeroxes.) The friend hesitates. The story has been sitting around unpublished for six years, and is odd by any measure. Written in mock Elizabethan dialect, its author wants it printed in an archaic ftyle, replete with Capitalized Nounf and esses that looked like effs. More to the point, the action consists almost entirely of fart jokes told by Shakespreare, Bacon, Raleigh, the Queen, and assorted randy courtiers. In the end the friend relents, agreeing to print 50 copies of 1601: Conversation, as it was by the Social Fireside, in the Time of the Tudors. The author after all was Samuel Clemens, a/k/a Mark Twain. ................................................. In a world so full of angst over the growing concentration of media in the fingers of a few moguls, it's strange that people still sneer at vanity publishing, more neutrally known as self-publishing. One has to wonder how they're defining "vanity." If vanity consists of paying to have one's point of view disseminated, then many legit presses and magazines could considered vain. The New Yorker, for instance, is known to be losing millions per year as a loss-leader for Advance Publications. Of course, profit and loss statements are not the source of this widespread disdain. It's the perceived lack of quality -- the absence of screening and editing. Ah, but is having an editor and an advance any guarantee of a readable finished product? (If you answered yes, go read Bitch, for which Elizabeth Wurtzel was advanced $500,000, then come back. Or better, go read the Finger's bitch-y review of it in the current issue of Detour.) An editor friend naturally disagrees. "Look," she says, defending the relative virtues of the winnowing process, "99% of everything sucks." We couldn't agree more, unless she amended that figure to 99.9%. Of the estimated 800 trillion books published last year by the major houses, there aren't a dozen this Finger will ever care to thumb through again. Throw a dart in Barnes & Noble and you're going to hit trash. The same goes for magazines, which despite lavish spending on writing, rewriting, editing, copyediting, design, redesign, photography, and photo retouching, manages to let countless inaccuracies and typos filter through their narrow-pored sieves -- while generally boring the hell out of anyone with more grey matter than a learning-disabled pigeon. The worst zines in the world have better excuses for living than the best issues of Swing and Maxim. Yes, anyone who's ever ploughed through a slush pile -- the towering stack of unsolicited manuscripts received by magazine and book editors -- knows that the tally of bad unpublished manuscripts out there is rivalled in mind-bogglingness only by the particulars of the defense budget. But the 99% rule cuts both ways. Say you read some 1,000 articles, stories, and books last year, and only 10 of those were true keepers. If even 1 of the 10 was self-published, then the vanity presses are clobbering their legit opponents in slugging percentage. And if not, what harm are self-publishers really doing, compared to the mass-marketers of pedigreed schlock? Twain put it maybe a bit too cruelly: "Let us be thankful for the fools. But for them the rest of us could not succeed." ................................................. Poe, Thoreau, Joyce, Hemingway, Kipling, Shaw, Whitman and of course Twain: vanity presses delight in reeling off all the famous people who were once self-published. It gives their potential customers hope and comfort, just as failed artists console themselves that Van Gogh went unrecognized in his lifetime, too. William Strunk, we learn, printed copies of his Elements of Style to use as a college teaching aid. Only when The New Yorker's E.B. White decided to spread his former professor's wisdom did it become a classic reference book. Gore Vidal, in his badass 1988 essay "The National Security State," touted H.R. Shapiro's privately published Democracy In America as "a masterly work, 14 years in the making." Of course, for every Elements of Style or Democracy In America, there's a Celestine Prophecy or What Color Is My Parachute, or worse. And The Finger harbors no illusions that those vanity presses which advertise at the back of Harper's and the Atlantic probably have quantity, not quality, uppermost in mind. Anyone considering paying to print their own book would do well to approach a nice smalltown printer, and steer clear of organized vultures looking to do bulk business off of frustrated scribes. Admittedly, a lot of self-published work succeeds only when graded on a curve. Shoddiness, amateurishness, irrationality -- all these weaknesses become strengths if one takes a voyeuristic view. But as often as one runs across a great new work of literary fiction from Knopf, one can find an amazingly-executed zine or self-published book which takes liberties and risks without sacrificing quality, expanding the range of possibilities for paid and unpaid writers alike. And when self-published works fail -- well, it's pretty pointless to shoot small fry in a barrel when the little fish already compete at a huge disadvantage. ................................................. It makes us happy to imagine some determined guy on a self-appointed national book tour of Mr. Carnegie's libraries, driving around in a beat-up Malibu with a trunkful of paperbacks. On a high shelf of each stone temples he slips a copy alongside a sympathetic neighbor -- Paul Goodman's Growing Up Absurd, let's say. He has a right to exult in this secret mission, knowing that one day years hence some likeminded soul will happen upon his self-published words, and devour them like a personal message from a minor deity. Look down your nose all you like. The last laugh is his, and a genuine one. "There are no grades of vanity," Twain the self-publisher said, "there are only grades of ability in concealing it." ................................................. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl