
It's been said the publishing world is a dying industry. With the rise of the Internet, free-flowing information and the younger generation's ineptitude of the concept of plagiarism, it's no wonder.
Or is it?
I have no doubt the publishing industry is changing, but I do not think it is dying. Rather, it is more evolving than anything else. Maybe publishing is pushing its way from a sea of tear-sheets and reams of paper onto the malleable dirt of the Internet. Okay, may that's not the best metaphor, but the publishing industry has been in the process of evolution since day one.
This past week, June 13, I've been reading through the archives of the American Scholar as research for their new tumblr. Steve, the business manager suggested I go through and find the issues the "famous" authors, like Albert Einstein or Natalie Angier, wrote in. I ended up coming across Jacques Barzun first, a man I have never heard of before. His work was first published in the 40s and I found his work well into the 60s. He wrote on many topics, from political commentary to philosophy. And yet, his words, written over 50 years ago, are still able to ring true today.
It was then I found the Autumn 2001 issue in which a man named Andre Bernard compiled a chrestomathy of the best work from the 70 years the magazine has been in existence. At the bottom of all 8 pages is a list of all significant authors from each decade starting in the 30s, when the journal was first published. W. E. B. DuBois, Alduous Huxley, Ralph Ellison, even R. Buckminster Fuller... the list goes on.
What this says to me about the publishing industry is that there is always something to publish. In regards to the American Scholar, there is always someone striving to better oneself as well as humanity. Twitter and Facebook allow information to reach people instantaneously. Such a barrage of data loses any semblance of quality-control. A sparkling gem can be as easily access as a pile of ash... but much harder to find. Anyone can publish anything online these days. I think the publishing industry--the real publishing industry--will still exist as a sort of filter, a suggestion to those tired of wading through the muck. And even then, that filter will always depend on who holds the most money.
But there is something else to be said about humanity. Paul Shorey said in the first issue of the American Scholar, Winter 1932: "The man of educated sensibilities, whether conservative or radical, pays a big price for the blessing of democracy in widest commonalty spread." Maybe we are all paying a price for the blessing of the Internet.
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