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TheLateAgeof Print
The LateAgeof Print
C o l u m b i a u n i v e r s i t y P r e s s | n e w y o r k
everyday book Culture
from Consumerismto Control
Ted Striphas
Columbia University Press
Publishers Since 1893
New York Chichester, West Sussex
is PDF is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-
Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License, available at http://
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Commons, 171 Second St., Suite 300, San Francisco, CA 94105 U.S.A.
“Noncommercial” as dened in this license specically excludes any sale
of this work or any portion thereof for money, even if the sale does not
result in a prot by the seller or if the sale is by a 501(c)(3) nonprot or
NGO.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Striphas, eodore G.
e lateageof print: everydaybookculturefromconsumerism to
control / Ted Striphas.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographic references and index.
ISBN 978-0-231-14814-6 (alk. paper)
1. Book industries and trade—United States. 2. Books and
reading—United States. 3. Publishers and publishing—United
States. 5. Electronic publishing—United States. 6. Internet
Bookstores—United States. I. Title.
Z471.S85 2009
381’.45002-dc22
References to Internet Web sites (URLs) were accurate at the time
of writing. Neither the author nor Columbia University Press is
responsible for URLs that may have expired or changed since the
manuscript was prepared.
For Phaedra
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction: TheLateAgeof Print 1
Bottom Lines 6
Edges 9
Sites 13
1 E-Books and the Digital Future 19
A Book by Any Other Name 23
Shelf Life 26
Book Sneaks 31
Disappearing Digits 40
A Dierent Story to Tell 44
2 The Big-Box Bookstore Blues 47
Chain Reactions? 51
oroughly Modern Bookselling 56
ings to Do with Big-Box Bookstores 70
History’s Folds 77
Contents
3 Bringing Bookland Online 81
“e Tragedy oftheBook Industry” 84
Encoding/Decoding—Sort of 91
A Political Economy of Commodity Codes 99
e Remarkable Unremarkable 107
4 Literature as Life on Oprah’s Book Club 111
O® 114
“No Dictionary Required” 117
“It’s More About Life” 125
A Million Little Corrections 130
An Intractable Alchemy 137
5 Harry Potter and theCultureofthe Copy 141
Securing Harry Potter 143
Pirating Potter 157
He-Who-Must-Be-Named 171
Conclusion: FromConsumerismto Control 175
On the Verge 176
From Heyday to History and Beyond 187
Notes 191
Index 231
viii | contents
Having taugHt Courses on the history and cultural politics of electronic
media for the better part of a decade, in the fall of 2006 I decided to shi
gears a bit. I designed a new undergraduate course called “e Cultures of
Books and Reading,” hoping it would dovetail with a book—this book—I
was working on at the time. As excited as I was about the subject matter, I
couldn’t help but harbor some doubt. Would the class attract enough stu-
dents to avoid preemptive cancellation by the university registrar? Aer all,
experience had taught me that undergraduates, most of whom are between
the ages of eighteen and twenty-two, would be enthusiastic to learn about
cutting-edge digital media and would also have plenty to say about increas-
ingly “old-fashioned” technologies, such as television. But would a class
about book culture, oered not in a literature but in a communication
department, spark their interest? Or would it seem too out of touch, too
frumpy, too analog? Some days it’s easy to believe books won’t be around
much longer. My worst fear, perhaps, was that something as mundane as
a lack of interest in my class would simultaneously lend credence to this
belief and eectively undercut a main argument I make here, namely, that
reports announcing the death of books have been greatly exaggerated.
As it turns out, I shouldn’t have second-guessed myself. To my surprise
and delight, the course enrollment was one student shy ofthe maximum.
e group was savvy about what’s been happening lately—and, in some
cases, not so lately—in thebook world. Many students professed to being
avid book readers, well beyond what they were assigned. Some even n-
ished a few pages of what seemed to be pleasure reading in the moments
Acknowledgments
before our class periods began. Granted, this course was an elective; the
extent to which their knowledge and interests can be described as typical
of their peers is thus dicult to judge. Even so, I should have known bet-
ter than to assume my undergraduate students hadn’t found a meaningful
place for books in their everyday lives.
Like these students, many people have caused me to clarify my own
assumptions about everydaybookculture during the long process of con-
ceiving, researching, writing, revising, and nally publishing this book. e
list of those I wish to thank must begin with Lawrence Grossberg. Larry
helped nurture this project from its inception, displaying his characteristic
generosity of time, spirit, and intellect. I owe a profound debt to him, one
I have no hope of repaying, except perhaps by mentoring my students as
skillfully and patiently as he mentored me.
I wish to extend my heartfelt gratitude tothe following teachers who
supported my research during my years as a graduate student in commu-
nication studies at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill: Marcus
Breen for helping me to nd my bearings as a media historian; Michael
Hardt for his rigorous reading of Marxism and contemporary theory, which
runs like a thread throughout this book; Vicky Johnson for rst prompting
me to imagine how television relates to books; Della Pollock for consis-
tently reminding me that good faith and good humor are key to making
critical intellectual work engaging for all involved; and Jan Radway for
demonstrating how to make cultural studies and book history harmonize.
Collectively you were—and are—my dream team.
I also want to acknowledge the contributions, both tangible and intan-
gible, of mentor, teacher, and friend John Nguyet Erni. It was John who rst
introduced me to cultural studies. In doing so, he forever aected how I
think about theeveryday objects that surround us. Other friends and col-
leagues deserve special recognition for assisting me at various stages of this
project. Kembrew McLeod, John Durham Peters, Jonathan Sterne, and Siva
Vaidhyanathan provided the advice, perspective, and support I needed pre-
cisely when I needed it. My gratitude extends tothe Conjunctures group
for oering a safe space in which to try out new ideas. Charles Acland,
Marty Allor, Anne Balsamo, Briankle Chang, Melissa Deem, Ron Greene,
James Hay, Lisa Henderson, Gil Rodman, Greg Seigworth, Mehdi Semati,
Jennifer Slack, Charlie Stivale, and Greg Wise have been especially helpful
in this regard. anks are also due to Henry A. Giroux, Gary Hall, and
Julia T. Wood for the condence they’ve displayed in my work, and to Tony
Falzone for helping me to navigate the murky waters of permission culture.
x | acknowledgments
[...]... abstract index of their value Instead of favoring either of these definitions of commodity, I wish to locate books in the tension between them What interests me are those moments in which they’re treated either as generic stuff or as hallowed objects, as well as the labor it takes to transform books fromthe one into the other This is nothing other than the work ofculture Edges Theeveryday is a central... fact, the practice of selling unbound books lingered into the first half ofthe twentieth century, though by then it had less to do with conducting business on the cheap Custom-bound books had become marks of distinction in an ageof ascendant mass manufacture, connoting the objects’ rarity and their owners’ prestige.51 In any event, precisely when in the course of their THELATEAGEOFPRINT | 11 printing,... spinoffs based on popular literary characters, to name just a few From electronic books and book superstores to online bookselling, and from Oprah Winfrey’s book club to Harry Potter, this book moves among some ofthe most prominent—indeed, commonplace—aspects ofeverydaybookculture today Its aim is not only to map the prevalent and pedestrian character of books but also to explore what their everydayness... call into question the circulation of printed books and, implicitly, that of other mass-produced consumer goods Through the technology of e-books, cultural producers have problematized the notion that a majority of people ought to own these goods, not to mention the assumption that producers must relinquish in perpetuity their rights tothe goods they sell E-books thus portend a shift away fromthe widespread... these words Nevertheless, the purpose ofTheLateAgeofPrint isn’t to make a fetish of books A substantial number of books about books have been published over the last decade or so, many of which rhapsodize about book collecting and care, the inveterate passion for reading, the wonder of libraries and bookstores, the highs imparted by the smell and texture of printed books—in a word, what Nicholas A... present even as it opens out onto the future In this book I attempt to glimpse the contours ofthelateageofprint in some ofthe most prosaic activities characteristic ofbookculture today: browsing around a large retail bookstore; selling books online; scanning a book s bar code at the checkout counter; reading and discussing a popular work with a group; waiting on a line to buy a hotly anticipated... only they are somehow different I’m neither prepared to write an elegy for printed books, nor am I prepared to make the claim that little has changed—or should have changed— THELATE AGE OF PRINT | 3 in the cultures of books over the past twenty-five, fifty, hundred, or five hundred years I genuinely value books, especially printed ones I’m surrounded by them as I write these words Nevertheless, the. .. realities of thebook trade have come to be seen as so customary, so banal, as to be overlooked almost entirely today.27 It may be that the “crisis” of books is linked not only to purported decreases in the amount of reading but also to people’s misgivings about— or, more accurately, their lack of historical perspective on the economic organization of thebook trade The work of Lucien Febvre and Henri-Jean... e -book content I argue that e-books are an emergent technological form by which problems pertaining tothe ownership and circulation of printed books are simultaneously posed and resolved The first section of this chapter represents a ground clearing of sorts Because so much of the debate surrounding e-books has tended to hinge on the degree to which they reproduce the form and function of their printed... are the “givens” ofbook culture, as it were Their familiarity often THELATE AGE OF PRINT | 9 makes them recede into the deep background of experience, so that at first glance—and maybe even after a second look—they’re apt to seem boring or unremarkable (Why do books have copyright pages? What allows me to pass along a book once I’ve purchased it? Why all those codes and symbols on the backs of most . in the present even as it opens out onto the future. In this book I attempt to glimpse the contours of the late age of print in some of the most prosaic activities characteristic of book culture. The Late Age of Print The Late Age of Print C o l u m b i a u n i v e r s i t y P r e s s | n e w y o r k everyday book Culture from Consumerism to Control Ted Striphas Columbia. testament to Philip’s vision, and to the vision of Columbia University Press, that they’ve permitted this book to deliver on one of the most compelling aspects of the late age of print. My mother,