PUBLISHING.
Encyclopedia Britannica
(https://en.wikisource.org/wiki)
In the technical sense,
publishing is the business of producing and placing upon the market printed
copies of the work of an author (see Book).
Before the invention of printing the actual maker of a manuscript was to a
great extent his own publisher and his own bookseller. Increase of facilities
for the production of copies led to a steady though slow differentiation of
functions. The author was the first factor to be isolated and confined to a
well-marked province, yet we may find upon the title-page of some old books an intimation
that they might be purchased either at the shop of the bookseller who published
them or at the lodgings of the author.
The separation of publishing from book selling
came later (see Bookselling). Booksellers were the first publishers of
printed books, as they had previously been the agents for the production and
exchange of authentic manuscript copies; and as they are quite competent to
make contracts with paper-makers, printers and bookbinders, there is no
particular reason why they should not be publishers still, except the tendency
of every composite business to break up, as it expands, into specialized departments.
That tendency may be seen at work in the publishing business itself. When
publishers had conquered their own province, and had confined booksellers to
book selling, they held in their own hands the entire business of distribution
to the trade. But a class of wholesale booksellers has grown up, and although
important retail booksellers in London continue to deal directly with the
publishers, the retail booksellers throughout the country draw their supplies
quite largely from the wholesale agents.
The intellectual movement which was largely
responsible for the French Revolution, and the general stir and upheaval which
followed that portentous cataclysm, precipitated the separation of production
from distribution in the book trade, by the mere expansion of the demand for
books. That separation was practically complete at the beginning of the 19th
century, although it would not be difficult to find survivals of the old order
of things at a much later date. The old bookseller-publishers were very useful
men in their time. They met pretty fairly the actual needs of the public; and
as regards the author, they took the place of the private patron upon whom he
was previously dependent. No doubt the author had much to endure at their
hands, still, they did undoubtedly improve his status by introducing him to
public patronage and placing him upon a sounder economic basis. If in the
earlier days they were less than liberal in their terms, it may be remembered
that their own business was not very extensive or very remunerative. They were
not equipped either with brains or with capital to extend that business in
answer to the growing demand for books. By the daily routine of their shops
they were tied down to narrow views, and their timidity is characteristically
shown by the fact that to publish a book of any importance required the
co-operation of a number of booksellers who shared the expenses and the
profits.
Enterprise could not be expected from a committee
of that kind and of that composition; hence there was not merely an
opportunity, but a clamorous demand for men of larger ideas and wider outlook
to undertake the proper business of publishing, unhampered by the narrowing
influences of retail trade.
Besides unconsciously improving the position of
authors by enabling them to appeal to the public instead of to patrons, whom
Johnson classed with other evils in the line “toil, envy, want, the patron and
the gaol,” the bookseller-publishers gave them, or many of them, steady
employment as literary assistants and advisers.
As the demand for books increased, these worthy
tradesmen felt with growing acuteness their own want of literary ability and of
education. They called in men of letters to supply their own deficiencies. No
doubt they expected the lowest kind of hack work from their assistants, no
doubt the pay was poor, no doubt they trampled upon the sensibilities of the
man of letters, and no doubt he irritated them by his businesslike habits.
Still, the association was useful to both parties; and indeed, one may lay down
many books at the present day with a sigh of regret that the writers had never
been compelled to go through an apprenticeship of the kind.
The emergence of the publishers as a separate
class was accompanied by differentiation of the functions of their literary
assistants. The routine drudgery which men of education and ability formerly
had to undergo fell to a class now known as “proof readers,” who are on the
watch for typographical errors, grammatical slips, ambiguities of expression,
obvious lapses of memory and oversights of all kinds. Men of letters became
“publishers' readers,” and their duty was to appraise the worth of the
manuscripts submitted, and to advise their employers as to the value of the
matter, the originality of the treatment, and the excellence of the style.
Their advice was also sought upon literary projects that may have suggested
themselves to the publishers, and novel suggestions emanating from themselves
were welcomed. Men of letters in positions of that kind could obviously exercise
very considerable influence over the proceedings of the publishing firms to
which they were attached, and many an unknown writer has owed the acceptance of
his work to the sympathetic insight of the publishers' reader.
The man of letters as publisher's reader is,
however, a transitory phenomenon in the evolution of the publishing business.
His primary function is to tell the publisher what is intrinsically good, but
probably he has always to some extent discharged the secondary function of
advising the publisher as to what it would pay to publish. The qualities which
make a man a sound critic of intrinsic worth are quite different from those
that make him a good judge of what the public will buy. When books were
comparatively few, and when the reading public was comparatively small, select
and disposed to give considerable attention to the few books it read, the
critical faculty was of more importance than the business one. But when the
output of books became large, and when, as the consequence of educational
changes, the reading public became numerous, uncritical and hurried and
superficial in its reading, the importance of the critical faculty in the
publisher's reader dwindled, while the faculty of gauging the public mind and
guessing what would sell became increasingly valuable. The publisher's literary
adviser belongs to the period when the publishing business had expanded
sufficiently to compel the publisher to look for skilled assistance in working
more or less upon the older traditions. But when, as is now the case, expansion
has gone so far as to swamp the older traditions, and to make publishing a
purely commercial affair, the literary reader gives place to the man of
business with aptitude for estimating how many copies of a given book can be sold.
This is practically recognized by at least one London publisher, who in recent
years paid no salary to his reader, but gave him a small commission upon every
copy that was sold of any book the publication of which he had recommended.
Nothing could more plainly indicate that literary faculty is not wanted, and
that the reader's function is to judge, not literary value, but commercial
utility.
The market is flooded with books badly written,
badly constructed, as poor in matter as in style, hastily flung together, and
outrageously padded to suit conventional relations between size and price. They
are books which no man of literary taste or judgment could ever recommend for
publication on their merits, but they are published, just as crackers are at
Christmas, on a calculation that a certain number will find buyers. Even if the
publisher sees no prospect of an adequate sale, he publishes the books all the
same, upon terms which ensure to him a manufacturing profit and throw the risk
of loss upon other shoulders.
There is no reproach, stated or implied, to the
publisher. He is merely a man of his age carrying on his business upon terms
which the age prescribes through a number of concurrent causes. Any reproach
that may fall upon him he invites by sometimes giving himself the airs of one
belonging to an earlier age, and claiming credit for acting upon principles
that are obsolete.
An author, even if he be an immortal genius, is,
from the economic point of view, a producer of raw material. A publisher,
however eminent, is from the same point of view a middleman who works up the
author's raw material into a saleable form and places it upon the market. The
relationship between the two is one that occurs with great frequency in
business, always giving rise to efforts by each party to adjust the division of
profits for his own advantage. If there be anything peculiar to the publishing
business it is that the party who in that business most successfully adjusts
matters for his own advantage is liable to be charged by the other with some
form of moral obliquity. The diatribes of authors against publishers are
familiar to every one; and publishers on their side have some hard things to
say about authors, though their sentiments are less piquantly and less publicly
expressed. The publisher is usually a more or less capable man of business,
while the author is generally—though there are very notable exceptions—quite
ignorant of business and apparently incapable of learning the rudiments. It
necessarily follows that the author, left to himself, accepts agreements and
signs contracts which are much less favourable than they need be to his
acquisition of a due share of the profits jointly made by himself and the
publisher. What makes his position still worse is the circumstance that each
author fights for his own hand, whereas the publishers, although in competition
with one another, are also to some extent in combination.
In these circumstances it occurred to Sir Walter
Besant and some others that a remedy for this inferiority in position might be
found in a combination of authors for mutual help and protection. After a
troublesome period of incubation the Society of Authors was established in
London in 1883, with Lord Tennyson as its first president, and with a goodly
list of 35 vice-presidents. It offered useful assistance to authors ignorant of
business in the way of examining contracts, checking publishers' accounts,
revising their sometimes too liberal estimates of costs of production, and
giving advice as to the publishers to be applied to or avoided in any given
case. It has no doubt been of great service in checking the abuses of the
publishing trade and in compelling the less scrupulous among the publishers to
conform more or less exactly to the practice of the more honourable. On general
questions such as that of copyright it serves to focus the opinions of authors,
though here it champions their interests against the public rather than against
the publishers. But the society has never been an effective combination of authors;
and indeed the obstacles, material and moral, to such a combination are so
great as to render complete success extremely improbable. Nothing could better
illustrate this difficulty than the fact that, concurrently with the Society of
Authors, a totally different machinery for the furtherance of the interests of
authors came into existence. The “literary agent” made his appearance about
1880. He is supposed to be an expert in all matters pertaining to publishing
and to the book market. He takes the author's business affairs entirely into
his hands; utilizes the competition among publishers to sell the author's work
to the highest bidder; checks accounts, estimates and sales; keeps the author's
accounts for him; and charges a commission upon the proceeds. Here we have the
author fighting as of old for his own hand. The only difference is that he does
his fighting by proxy, hiring a stronger man than himself to deal the blows on
his account. There is no question whatever of solidarity with his fellow-authors,
and the whole system is a direct negation of the principle upon which the
Society of Authors was founded.
On the other hand, both publishers and
booksellers have long had the disposition, and to some extent the ability, to
co-operate, and the efforts of both sets of men have unfortunately been in the
direction of maintaining, if not raising, the price of books to the public.
Since the formation of the Publishers' Association in 1896 the publishing trade
has been strongly organized on the trade-union pattern, and its operations have
been assisted by the less powerful Booksellers' Association. Books, like many
other articles, are sold by the makers at list prices, and the retailer's
profit is furnished by discounts off these prices. Under such a system competition
among retailers takes the form of the sacrifice by the more enterprising of a
portion of their discount. They prefer a large sale at a low profit to a small
sale at a high profit. It is always the desire of the less enterprising to put
an end to this competition by artificial regulations compelling all to sell at
the same price.
Many attempts have been made to destroy freedom
of dealing in books. In July 1850 twelve hundred booksellers within 12 m. of
the London General Post Office signed a stringent agreement not to sell below a
certain price. This agreement was broken almost immediately. Another attempt
was made in 1852; but at a meeting of distinguished men of letters resolutions
were adopted declaring that the principles of the Booksellers' Association of
that period were opposed to free trade, and were tyrannical and vexatious in
their operations. The Times took an active part in defending and
enforcing the conclusions which they sanctioned. The question was eventually
referred to a commission, consisting of Lord Campbell, Dean Milman and George
Grote, which decided that the regulations were unreasonable and inexpedient,
and contrary to the freedom which ought to prevail in commercial transactions.
An attempt was also made in 1869 to impose restrictions upon the retail
bookseller; but that also failed, mainly by reason of the ineffective
organization which the publishers then had at command.
Feeling their hands greatly strengthened by the
establishment of their Association, the publishers were emboldened to make
another effort to put an end to reductions in the selling price of books. After
much discussion between authors, publishers and booksellers, a new scheme was
launched on the 1st of January 1900. Books began to be issued at net prices,
from which no bookseller was permitted to make any deduction whatever. This
decree was enforced by the refusal of all the publishers included in the
Association to supply books to any bookseller who should dare to infringe it in
the case of a book published by any one of them. In other words, a bookseller
offending against one publisher was boycotted by all. Thus, what is known as
the “net system” depended absolutely upon the close trade union into which the
publishers had organized themselves. The Booksellers' Association signed an
agreement to charge the full published price for every net book, but that body
had no real power to impose its will upon recalcitrant booksellers. Its assent
to the terms of the publishers merely relieved them of the fear of active opposition
on the part of the wholesale booksellers and the large retail booksellers,
mainly located in London.
All books were not issued at net prices even in
1910, though the practice had extended enormously since it began in 1900. But
the principle was applied all round. In the case of such books as six-shilling
novels the discount price of four shillings and sixpence was treated as the net
price, and the usual penalty was inflicted upon those who dared to sell at any
lower price, at all events within twelve months of the date of publication.
Owing to the fact that the net system was
gradually introduced, net books and discount books being issued side by side
with discount books in the majority, the full effect of the innovation was not
immediately apparent. But the establishment of The Times Book Club in
1905 brought the system to the test. That Club aimed at giving to the readers
of The Times a much more prompt and copious supply of new books than
could be obtained from the circulating libraries. The scheme was at first very
favourably received by the publishers, who saw in it the promise of largely
increased orders for their goods. They obtained these orders, but then
something else happened which they had not foreseen. Of the books they issued
the vast majority were of only ephemeral interest. For a few weeks, sometimes
only for a few days, everybody wanted to glance at them, and then the public
interest dwindled and died. As the copies ceased to be in demand for
circulation the Book Club naturally tried to take advantage of the buying
demand, which always exists, though it is always repressed by the very high
prices charged by publishers in Great Britain. The Book Club sold its surplus
copies at reduced prices, and was obliged to do so, since otherwise it would
have been swamped with waste paper. But the authors and publishers now rose in
arms. Forgetting that they had been paid the full trade price for every copy,
they said that the Book Club was spoiling the market, and that a wholesale
buyer had no right to sell at the best price he could get. Hence arose what
came to be known as the Book War, between The Times and the associated
publishers and booksellers, the publishers withdrawing their advertisements
from The Times and doing their best to refuse books to the Book Club.
The conflict made a considerable commotion, and the arguments on both sides
were hotly contested. It did not, however, alter the fact that the public will
not pay high prices for books having no permanent value.
The Booksellers' Association, dominated by the
large booksellers in London and a few great towns, made common cause with the
Publishers' Association. Their interests were not affected by the net system,
and they saw in the Book Club an energetic competitor. The small booksellers up
and down the country are injuriously affected, because it is more difficult
than ever for them to stock books on which there is a very small margin of
profit, and the sale of which they cannot any longer push by the offer of a
discount. Formerly, if a book did not sell at the full price, they could
sacrifice their profit and even part of what they paid for it, thus saving at
least part of their invested capital. Now if a book does not sell at the net
price they have to keep it so long that it is probably unsaleable at any price
and forms a dead loss. Hence they cannot afford to stock books at all, and that
channel of distribution is blocked.
The cast-iron retail price is economically wrong.
A bookseller with a large turn-over in the midst of a dense population can
afford to sell at a small profit. He finds his reward in increased sales. His
action is good for the public, for the author, and for the publisher himself,
were he enlightened enough to see it. But a small bookseller in a remote
country town cannot afford to sell at an equally low profit, because he has not
access to a public large enough to yield correspondingly increased sales. Yet
both are arbitrarily compelled to sell only at a uniform price fixed by the
publisher. What makes the matter worse is that there is no cast-iron wholesale
price. The small bookseller has to pay more for his books than the large one
who buys in dozens of copies. Carriage on his small parcels often eats up what
profit is left to him. As he is not allowed to have books “on sale or return,”
he has no chance whatever; and as a distributing agency the small bookseller
has become negligible.
It is not a necessary consequence of the net
system that new books should cost the public more than before. If it has become
the practice to sell a ten-shilling book for seven shillings and sixpence, and
if that practice be thought objectionable, the obvious remedy, supposing
publishers to have no other end in view, is to publish the book at the price
for which it is sold. But the net system has been used to enforce the sale of
the book at the published price and nothing less, which obviously amounts to
compelling the public to pay more than before for the book. Again, if the
object were to benefit the retail bookseller by relieving the pressure of
competition, it is plain that after abolishing discounts the publishers would
charge the same wholesale prices as before to the booksellers. But, on the
contrary, they have so adjusted their prices that the retailer gets no more
profit upon a book sold net than he formerly obtained from a book of the same
published price after allowing a discount. Thus the object and result of the
net system is to increase the profits of the publishers at the expense of the
public. This has been accomplished at a time when paper is cheaper than at any
previous period, and when machinery has reduced the cost of composition,
printing and binding to an almost equal extent. It is a remarkable illustration
of the power of combination among quasi-monopolists to raise the price of their
commodities even in the face of a falling market.
The Book War came to an end in 1908; but though
the publishers and booksellers appeared in the result to have brought the Book
Club within terms which were satisfactory to them, the whole situation had
really been changed. The public for the first time had been educated. Public
attention had been forcibly directed to the fact that there is no reason in the
nature of things why the price of books should increase, but on the contrary,
every reason why they should be cheaper than at any previous period. A certain
mystery which had hung over the publishing trade was effectually dispelled. The
man in the street learned that books priced to him at six shillings can be
produced by the joint labours of the paper maker, the printer, and the
bookbinder for about sixpence, and that in many cases the author gets little or
nothing out of the difference. There followed a quickening of the public demand
for literature at reasonable prices, and enterprising people were found to meet
the demand. A vast quantity of good literature, much better than nine-tenths of
what is written to-day, has been brought within reach of persons of the
smallest incomes. Hundreds of standard works have appeared in convenient and
readable editions at a shilling, at sevenpence and even sixpence per volume.
These cheap editions have an enormous sale, not only because they are low in
price, but because they have permanent value. For the cost of a novel which he
will never look at twice, and which perhaps was hardly worth reading once, a
man may obtain half a dozen books that have stood the test of time, and that
will become the valued companions of his leisure. He gets them too in a form
suited not only to his purse, but to the limited storage accommodation at the
disposal of the mass of modern readers, who can neither buy nor house the
stately editions that adorn the libraries of the wealthy. Thus, in respect of
the large class of books read for recreation, we have reached the paradoxical
position that cheapness and excellence go hand-in-hand; and that the
disparaging adjective frequently linked with “cheap” is more properly
associated with dear and pretentious.
Nor does the counter movement stop even here.
There is a growing tendency to bring out books of current production in cheap
editions, and also to publish the original edition at prices which must give a
painful shock to the authors of the net system. Cheap magazines, and the feuilletons
which newspapers are adopting from French practice, make considerable inroads
upon the province of the six-shilling novel; and as regards more serious books
the newspapers now give an amount of information about their contents which
goes far to console the public for the prohibitive prices of the books themselves.
These movements are developing and will continue to develop, seriously
interfering with the plans of those who devised the net system. The combination
publishers have never understood that, apart from the very small percentage of
works which make real additions to the sum of knowledge or of genuine literary
achievement, the reading of the books they turn out is a pastime, which has to
compete in public favour with a great variety of other pastimes. They have
chosen to make their form of recreation extremely expensive, with the double
result that the public turn to others, and that even their own is increasingly
supplied by cheaper agencies.
There are certain classes of books which must
always be relatively expensive, because they appeal only to students of some
particular branch of science or of art or of literature, whose number is not
great. But these are books of enduring value. Their price is justified not only
by their prolonged service, but by the erudition or the exceptional qualities
which go to the writing of them, as well as by the frequently exceptional cost
of producing them. But as regards the vast output of books which merely amuse
an idle hour, the existence of a large body of readers is the only excuse for
their appearance, and if they cannot be produced at a low price ensuring an
extensive sale they ought not to be produced at all. Thus there is more than a
mere money question involved in the contention about price. An artificial
system of prices leads to the printing of a vast quantity of trash, which
demoralizes the reading public and is a serious obstacle to the success of the
better books. Such a system operates, in fact, as a protective duty infavour of
mediocrity and even of something worse. It is no defence of such a system that it
panders to the vanity of incompetent scribblers, and enables publishers to make
money by soiling paper that had better have been kept clean.
A rational system of prices would automatically
solve some of the difficulties of the book-world. If a book is selling by tens
of thousands of copies, as every book printed for pastime ought to do, it would
not matter at what price any large buyer chose to resell his purchases. They
would only be a drop in the bucket, and all the contention about second-hand
prices would disappear. Then there is the troublesome system of “remainders,”
that is to say, the unsaleable copies of thousands of books published every
year. The editions are small enough—probably not more than one thousand
copies—yet, in spite of circulating libraries, a third or a half of that modest
number remains in the warehouses of the publishers. Sometimes they are sold for
about the cost of their fiimsy covers; sometimes they simply go to be reduced
to their original pulp at the paper mills. If a book has any sale justifying
its production, there will be no question of remainders, supposing its supply
to have been regulated by the most ordinary prudence. The sale of such a book
never stops dead, and any small surplus of copies can always be got rid of at a
small reduction in price.
Towards the end of the 19th century came a large
influx into England of American literature, especially fiction. Not only was
there a growing appreciation of many American writers, but the attractive
“get-up” of American books made its influence felt upon the British market.
Some of the American methods of distribution were also introduced into Great
Britain, but at first with only partial success. The most successful effort was
the sale of important expensive works through the medium of newspapers.
Canvassing, which was a common method of distributing books in the United
States, met with little support in the United Kingdom, although about the
middle of the 19th century a large trade was done through England and Scotland
by canvassers, who sold in numbers and parts such works as Family Bibles, Daily
Devotions, Lives of Christ and Foxe's Book of Martyrs.
The methods of
publishing in America are similar to those adopted in Great Britain, but the
discount to the booksellers is generally given pro rata according to the
number purchased. It is, however, in respect of the means of distribution that
the systems of the two countries differ most. In America the general stores to
a large extent take the place of the English bookseller, and by their energy
and extensive advertising a wider public is served. In the distribution of
fiction the American plan of “booming” a book by copious advertising, although
expensive, is often the means of inducing a large sale, and of bringing an
author's name before the public. In 1901 the net system, as adopted in Great
Britain, was partially introduced into America.
The continental
methods of publishing and distributing, especially in Germany, differ, in many
respects very materially, from those of Great Britain. In even the smallest
German towns there is a bookseller who receives on sale, immediately upon
publication, a supply of such new books as he or the publisher may think
suitable to his class of book-buyers. The bookseller submits these books
to his customers, and by this method most books
issued are at once placed at the disposal of any buyer interested in the
particular subject. The large sums spent in other countries upon advertisements
are thus saved. At the book fairs held in Leipzig at Easter and Michaelmas the
accounts for books sent on sale are made up and paid. In France all books have
to be licensed before publication, but the methods of publication differ little
from those of other continental countries, in all of which book prices are much
lower than in England.
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