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Book Wars. John B. ThompsonЧитать онлайн книгу.

Book Wars - John B. Thompson


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umbrella that carried the same name – Penguin, Random House (now Penguin Random House following their merger in 2013), Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins, Hachette or Macmillan – even if in practice the operations in the US and in the UK operated largely independently of one another and reported directly to the parent company.

      The large publishing corporations became major players in the field of Anglo-American trade publishing, together accounting for around half of total retail sales in the US and the UK by the early 2000s. In a field characterized by large retail chains and powerful agents who controlled access to customers and content respectively, there were clear advantages to being big. Scale gave them leverage in their negotiations with the large retail chains, where terms of trade could make a real difference to the profitability of the publisher. It also gave them access to the deep pockets of the large conglomerates, which greatly strengthened their hand when it came to competing for the most sought-after content, where, thanks in part to the growing power of agents, the size of the advance was often the decisive consideration. Smaller and medium-sized publishers simply couldn’t compete with the financial clout wielded by the new publishing corporations, and many eventually hauled up the white flag and joined one of the groups.

      It was in the context of an industry structured in this way that, from the early 1980s on, the digital revolution began to make its presence felt. Initially, this was a low-key affair, invisible to the outsider. Like so many other sectors of industry, the early impact of the digital revolution was in the area of logistics, supply-chain management and the gradual transformation of back-office systems. For an industry like book publishing, where thousands of new products – that is, books – are published every week, each bearing a unique numerical identifier or ISBN, the potential for achieving greater efficiencies in supply-chain management through the use of IT was enormous. Huge investments were made throughout the 1980s and 1990s to create more efficient systems for managing all aspects of the publishing supply chain, from production, rights and royalties to ordering, warehouse management, sales and fulfilment. Improved IT systems enabled publishers to manage the publishing process more efficiently, enabled wholesalers to offer much better services to retailers, and enabled retailers to monitor their stock levels and re-order on a daily basis in the light of computerized point-of-sale data. Behind the scenes, the entire book supply chain was being quietly but radically transformed. These were not the kinds of developments that would get blood racing through the veins, but it would be hard to overstate their significance for the day-to-day operations of the publishing industry.

      What made the digital revolution unique is that it offered the possibility of a completely different way of handling the content that was at the heart of the publishing business. For, at the end of the day, publishing, like other sectors of the media and creative industries, is about symbolic content – that is, about a particular kind of information that takes the form of stories or other kinds of extended text. What the digital revolution made possible was the transformation of this information or symbolic content – indeed, any information or symbolic content – into sequences of digits (or streams of bits) that can be processed, stored and transmitted as data. Once information takes the form of digitized data, it can be easily manipulated, stored, combined with other data and transmitted using networks of various kinds. Now we’re in a new world, very different from the world of physical objects like cars, refrigerators and print-on-paper books. It is a world of weightless data that can be subjected to a whole new set of processes and transmitted via networks that have their own distinctive properties. And the more that publishing is drawn into this new world, the further it moves away from the old world of physical objects which had been its home since the time of Gutenberg. In short, the symbolic content of the book is no longer tied to the physical print-on-paper object in which it was traditionally embedded.

      But the digital revolution did much more than this: it transformed the whole information and communication environment of contemporary societies. By bringing together information technology, computers and telecommunications, the digital revolution enabled ever-increasing quantities of digitized information to be transmitted at enormous speeds, thereby creating new networks of communication and information flow on a scale that was unprecedented. The informational life-worlds of ordinary people were changing as never before. Soon they would be carrying around in their pocket or bag a small device that would function simultaneously as a phone, a map and a computer, enabling them to stay permanently connected to others, to pinpoint their location and get directions, and to access vast quantities of information at the touch of a screen. Traditional creative industries like publishing found themselves caught up in a vortex of change that deeply affected their businesses, but over which they had little or no control. This was a process that was being driven by others – by large technology companies based primarily on the West Coast of the US, far away from the traditional heartlands of Anglo-American trade publishing. These companies were governed by different principles and animated by an ethos that was alien to the traditional world of publishing, and yet their activities were creating a new kind of information environment to which the old world of publishing would have to adapt.


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