Publishing Industry

James Joyce’s Untamable Power

James Joyce’s Untamable Power James Joyce’s Untamable Power

Censors thought it dirty and rebellious, but what makes Ulysses radical is its dramatization of the unending conflict between good and evil.

Jun 3, 2014 / Books & the Arts / James Longenbach

A Minimum Wage for Writers? ‘The Nation’ (Almost) Proposed It In 1912.

A Minimum Wage for Writers? ‘The Nation’ (Almost) Proposed It In 1912. A Minimum Wage for Writers? ‘The Nation’ (Almost) Proposed It In 1912.

There is no avoiding the inherently alienating consequences of trying to earn a living through the production of words.

May 30, 2014 / Back Issues / Richard Kreitner

University Presses Under Fire

University Presses Under Fire University Presses Under Fire

How the Internet and slashed budgets have endangered one of higher education’s most important institutions.

May 6, 2014 / Books & the Arts / Scott Sherman

The Brand Is My Business

The Brand Is My Business The Brand Is My Business

The only mystery about The Black-Eyed Blonde is when publishing derivative works became original.

Apr 22, 2014 / Books & the Arts / Sarah Weinman

Remembering André Schiffrin

Remembering André Schiffrin Remembering André Schiffrin

For decades, first at Pantheon and then at the New Press, he was a lion of progressive publishing.

Dec 18, 2013 / Books & the Arts / Victor Navasky

Here Comes Everybody

Here Comes Everybody Here Comes Everybody

Women writers are far outnumbered by men in magazines and book reviews, but why? Part of the answer lies in book publishing.

Nov 19, 2013 / Books & the Arts / Miriam Markowitz

Copyright Without Law?

Copyright Without Law? Copyright Without Law?

A legal quirk enabled Samuel Roth to pirate Ulysses. Was Roth a copyright anarchist or a pioneer?

Oct 1, 2013 / Books & the Arts / Caleb Crain

Rising Above the Failure of Imagination

Rising Above the Failure of Imagination Rising Above the Failure of Imagination

The conversation about diversity in Science Fiction & Fantasy reveals how racism constrains even imagination. 

Sep 10, 2013 / Blog / Roxane Gay

Safety Net: On Thomas Bernhard and Siegfried Unseld

Safety Net: On Thomas Bernhard and Siegfried Unseld Safety Net: On Thomas Bernhard and Siegfried Unseld

In his writing and life, Thomas Bernhard led a charge in the opposite direction. His publisher always broke his fall.

Jan 30, 2013 / Books & the Arts / Holly Case

How Mergermania Is Destroying Book Publishing

How Mergermania Is Destroying Book Publishing How Mergermania Is Destroying Book Publishing

The merger of Penguin and Random House is part of a trend that has been deadly for literary authors and serious nonfiction.

Nov 28, 2012 / Books & the Arts / André Schiffrin

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