
Contents
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Academic Publishing Origins Academic Publishing Origins
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Open Access Open Access
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What is an Academic Book? What is an Academic Book?
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University Presses University Presses
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Commercial Academic Publishers Commercial Academic Publishers
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Peer Review Peer Review
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The Cross-over Book The Cross-over Book
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Journals Publishing Journals Publishing
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Textbook Publishing Textbook Publishing
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Conclusions Conclusions
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References References
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16 Academic Publishing
Get accessSamantha J. Rayner is a Reader in Publishing at UCL. She is also Director of UCL’s Centre for Publishing, co-Director of the Bloomsbury CHAPTER and series editor for Cambridge University Press’s Elements series on Publishing and Book Culture. She is also the co-editor of the Academic Book of the Future BOOC (Book as Open Online Content) with UCL Press, and deputy editor of the Journal of the International ArthurianSociety (JIAS). She was the lead investigator on the AHRC/British Library Academic Book of the Future Project.
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Published:09 May 2019
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Abstract
This chapter on academic publishing covers the origins of the field; the impact of the two major drivers of change—the printing press and the Internet—on the spread of knowledge; Open Access; the monograph; university presses; academic libraries; commercial academic publishers; trade publishers and the cross-over book; peer review; journals; HE textbook publishing. It looks at all these areas through the lens of change, stressing the need for greater connectivity between the various communities of practice involved in the academic publishing field, and underlines the historic and existing collaborative and innovative strengths it contains.
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