
Contents
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Transformation of the Field of Trade Publishing Transformation of the Field of Trade Publishing
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The Value of Brand-Name Authors The Value of Brand-Name Authors
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Frontlist vs Backlist Frontlist vs Backlist
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The Role of Marketing and Publicity The Role of Marketing and Publicity
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Challenges and Opportunities of the Digital Revolution Challenges and Opportunities of the Digital Revolution
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References References
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15 Trade Publishing
Get accessJohn B. Thompson is Professor of Sociology at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge. His publications include Ideology and Modern Culture (1990), The Media and Modernity (1995), Political Scandal (2000), Books in the Digital Age (2005), and Merchants of Culture (2010). He is currently completing a new book on the digital revolution in the publishing industry. His books have been translated into more than a dozen languages and he was awarded the European Amalfi Prize for Sociology and the Social Sciences in 2001 for Political Scandal.
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Published:09 May 2019
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Abstract
Trade publishing is the world of general-interest books, both fiction and non-fiction, that are written for a non-specialist readership and sold through the general retail trade, including retail chains such as Barnes & Noble in the USA and Waterstones in the UK, independent booksellers, and online retailers such as Amazon. For many people, this is the world they think of first when they think of books and publishing: it is the public face of publishing. This chapter analyses the world of trade publishing in the USA and Britain. It shows how this world has changed since 1960 and it analyses four aspects of trade publishing that are particularly important for understanding it today: the value of author brand; the relation between frontlist and backlist; the role of marketing and publicity; and the challenges and opportunities created by the digital revolution.
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