Larssen
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Has the transition to digital markedly increased book sales? I know I only buy ebooks and have done so since it became an option.

uziq wrote:

you are arraigning them for being dry, methodical, over-evidenced, repetitive.
But if you agree with this notion you'll have to concur there's merit in my statement that most good ideas can be reduced to article form, either before or after the publication of a book. It's not an outlandish statement. I never denied books have specific value in academia.
Larssen
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uziq wrote:

Larssen wrote:

people like buying books.
Mostly for decoration and to give an air of intellectualism. Can't tell you how many stupid fucks I've met with impressive personal libraries in their living rooms.
ok jay. did you knock your head this morning? this all reeks of deluded self-defense and unrestrained egotism.
Who buys hundreds of print books these days
uziq
Member
+492|3450
sales for academic monographs were never exactly high. for an academic book to sell in the 1000s was rare in the pre-digital era. 95% of the sales are to university libraries as they are the only buyers who can afford it. private individual readers, again, are not picking up that 220-page, $200 stanford university press monograph.

it would be best if you didn't just glean some random article without context off the internet, when you clearly have no idea what you're talking about.

sales of regular trade history books, the sort you find in high-street bookstores, stocked nationwide, seldom sell > 2,500 copies. that's considered a 'good success' by any metric. again, i doubt you understand any of this context. is the 'book dying' and the journal article evidently so much better a format because of book sales? there's just way too much to unpack and explain to even support your argument. sales figures have nothing to do with the suitability or merits of books.

i don't even know why you're still persevering in arguing about academic monographs when people commented on your lack of reading in general. nobody ever expected you to be reading academic monographs for fun. they are specialist texts intended for an audience of academic peers and fellow researchers. useful for cribbing from if you're a student, passing through the university on towards other things, but not exactly riveting reads for a general audience. you're putting way too much emphasis on the format of the academic monograph. you don't read ANYTHING. have you even been to a book store? they don't stock academic monographs! dipshit!

But if you agree with this notion you'll have to concur there's merit in my statement that most good ideas can be reduced to article form, either before or after the publication of a book. It's not an outlandish statement
your statement was that BOOKS could be reduced to a pithy article format, not academic monographs, which are necessarily meant to be long expositions and in-depth scholarly treatments. i said that's bullshit and countered that a life of napoleon wouldn't fit in a journal article. to which you replied 'those are only for hobbyists'. lmfao. it's like you don't know anything about general book-buying audiences.

Last edited by uziq (2020-07-03 03:28:14)

uziq
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Larssen wrote:

uziq wrote:

Larssen wrote:


Mostly for decoration and to give an air of intellectualism. Can't tell you how many stupid fucks I've met with impressive personal libraries in their living rooms.
ok jay. did you knock your head this morning? this all reeks of deluded self-defense and unrestrained egotism.
Who buys hundreds of print books these days
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,053|6770|PNW

I guess there's a Japanese word (no surprise) for people who buy and collect books but don't read them. I don't know if that extends to having a couple packed bookshelves or cramming them anywhere they can fit and probably shouldn't be stored.

If the former (and not hoarding), it seems like a fairly harmless activity that shouldn't rent space in your head when other people do it.

I myself have a ton of books I haven't read yet. It's called a backlog. There's a few technical ones that are no longer really relevant even for donation and should go into storage or be prepped for recycle, though.
uziq
Member
+492|3450
people collect all sorts of objects just to have them, and to fetishize the object. it is completely irrelevant.

the print trade in general has actually rebounded a lot since the inception of the ebook/e-reader. when the technology was a novelty, there was a lot of scaremongering and a dip for a few years, but sales of print books are back up now and co-exist with ebooks perfectly well. i used to package up and produce ebooks every friday afternoon when i was done with sending books to print for the week. it takes publishers 5 minutes to do and might bring in a few dozen or a couple hundred extra sales.

people still like buying books.

talking about the sales figures of academic monographs is laughably inane. print journal subscriptions are also way down. the university library and research archive is increasingly digital. this is good for access to research. nobody outside of university libraries could afford a journal subscription or a hoard of academic monographs, anyway. they are pieces of research, produced by researchers, sold and priced and consumed by other researchers. it has nothing to do with the 'viability' of the format, and to even mention 'sales figures' or 'market demand' is hilariously wrongheaded. there IS NO 'consumer market' for academic books and journal articles. it's irrelevant.
Larssen
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+99|1885
but I never intended for my argument to be about anything other than academic print. 99% of my reading is either articles or reports, other than that it's  news magazine stuff. I read the occasional shitty scifi because it's fun but eh, no. No non fiction I guess. The blockchain book isn't exactly leisurely reading either. Even though I studied history I'm also not all too interested in history books. Perhaps I'm a little dysfunctional in this department.
uziq
Member
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Larssen wrote:

A while ago I wrote somewhere here that I barely read books outside of my field (not counting fiction etc) but it got me thinking. I do read a ton, both inside and outside my field, just rarely entire books.

IMO almost every idea or opinion worth reading can be reduced to article size (max ~50 pages) and many books seem to be bloated versions of articles academics already published X years prior. All it usually is is a detailed dive or more robust set of case studies/arguments to underpin already fairly fleshed out ideas.
here comes the backtrack.

your original statement clearly was aimed at books and anything containing 'ideas or opinions'. i responded to your comment as such. nobody in this thread, in fact, is discussing their specialist literature, work documents, or professional reading habits. we are discussing general reading and general books.

i responded in my first post that it was such a ludicrous statement, that most topics for general history books couldn't even fit in a journal article. a life of napoleon is just one of them, but any number of topics or opinions (i.e. polemics) are better treated over book-length developments. people enjoy reading book-length treatments of them. whether it's the d-day landings, the crusades, king richard, caesar, whatever. the book clearly has a point and a place.

you dismissed all that as 'for hobbyists', when it's so patently fucking not. the vast majority of books that are consumed by a reading public fall into those 'general' categories above, which are precisely non-specialist, non-academic.

you just don't read and for some reason you can't square it with your ego. it's not some huge personal failing, larssen. it's a habit and a discipline one has to acquire. it takes some application. it takes concentration. i don't see anything to celebrate in skimming journal reviews to form your opinion on every single thing. it's lazy and skips deep knowledge. you have no issue in committing to a workout regime but will literally bend over backwards to claim that 'book are dead' because you're too lazy to read. it's very weak shit and you look very silly.
Larssen
Member
+99|1885
uziq that's a misinterpretation but perhaps i should've been more clear. I meant Ideas and opinions as in theory, abstraction and interpretation. It's what I pointed towards with your napoleon thing as well. inside my field being security and conflict, outside = economy, sociology, occasionally philosophy, but the professionally produced stuff. We're on different wavelengths here.
uziq
Member
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well there's books and there's books. it's why i asked you to be more specific when you started railing against 'academic books' in your post. there is a whole genre of non-specialist non-fiction that deals with philosophy, economics, sociology, etc. that is in fact what i commissioned and published for several years, building a list of titles in those genres. occasionally i commissioned or edited academics, doing a side-gig, but just as often they were written by professional writers or full-time authors. there is a huge book-buying public for this sort of content.

we're back to my earlier point, that you're arraigning academic monographs for being dry and overly detailed. that's their entire point. you do not understand the ecosystem of research at all. what a journal article is for. what an academic monograph is for. to conclude that academic books are going the way of the dodo because they weren't seen much in your seminar rooms is just funny. they are written for the community of researchers, not 20-year-olds with a term paper or exam to pass. and of course they have a purpose within the academic-research world. you ultimately need books as 'summas', as i said, ultimate fonts of knowledge, exhaustive resources, with detailed bibliographies, indexes, concordances, appendices, etc. it is literally how knowledge is codified and perpetuated. how would knowledge transmission even work if we only used journal articles? do i even have to get into this with you? it's too stupid to even deserve comment.
Larssen
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The way of the dodo may be a bit strong but I do think they're of lesser importance now and increasingly so, but perhaps we disagree there. When's the last time you saw a historian publish a 10-volume tome on the history of a certain timeperiod? That's already out of the window for quite some time now.

Similarly I'm not so sure the now younger generation of newly tenured researchers and professors will subject their peers to the hurdle of publishing a 300+ page book before giving them acknowledgement, or if publishing multiple books will still be the norm. Perhaps we'll see eminent academics in the future that never did publish an entire book or only a couple at best. It's already the case in some more technical fields.
uziq
Member
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oh and for the record i totally disagree that philosophy would be better served by having 'ideas and abstractions' presented as journal articles rather than books. philosophy is the complete inverse to your claim. every influential and significant contribution to philosophy has come in the form of a book, not some journal article published alongside 12 others in a year by a hard-pressed careerist academic. philosophy requires reflection, long-form analysis and elaboration, and, yes, books. the ideas might germinate as a journal article or a lecture/symposium; but the real heft is in the book.

people don't discuss kant or hegel's journal articles. we don't refer to heidegger's groundbreaking topical review. wittgenstein didn't change the world of philosophy with a journal article. the tractatus logico-philosophicus literally means a treatise; a book.

this has been a two page spiral out of an incredibly bad take. maybe you should read a book.
uziq
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Larssen wrote:

The way of the dodo may be a bit strong but I do think they're of lesser importance now and increasingly so, but perhaps we disagree there. When's the last time you saw a historian publish a 10-volume tome on the history of a certain timeperiod? That's already out of the window for quite some time now.
this is factually, and absolutely, incorrect. if you read the london, new york or los angeles review of books, you would see that there is a near-constant supply of these things coming out. it has not slowed at all. how would academic publishing houses continue to exist if there wasn't a continual industry of producing books?

you are way out of your depth here and i can't help you except to say, er, stop making proclamations about things you know nothing about. again, these 10-volume magnum opi don't appear in high-street book stores, because they are produced for and consumed by researchers.

if you don't see long works on 'time periods', that's merely because of a change of fashion/method in historiography, and 'time periods' are now out. but the multi-volume academic works of course are still being produced on a yearly basis.

Similarly I'm not so sure the now younger generation of newly tenured researchers and professors will subject their peers to the hurdle of publishing a 300+ page book before giving them acknowledgement, or if publishing multiple books will still be the norm. Perhaps we'll see eminent academics in the future that never did publish an entire book or only a couple at best. It's already the case in some more technical fields.
this is factually, and absolutely, incorrect. almost all junior researchers now are expected to have a book contract or the promise of a book in their early career. it is a significant early career hurdle for post-docs. competition is so fierce that anyone who isn't upselling their PhD thesis into a book contract is considerably behind. you do realize that a PhD thesis itself is potentially a 280-320 page book, right? christ how clueless are you! a 120,000 word doctoral thesis is a book-length piece of work!

Last edited by uziq (2020-07-03 04:18:31)

Larssen
Member
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I know that is the case right now but it's a senior cadre imposing that career hurdle, one that is universally despised by the way, do you believe once the younger generation has a say it will remain the same? Also, PhD theses here can be and are usually bundled as a collection of articles - which is very different from a book.

In historiography at least you'll have to reach into history to find the professional academics that produced many volumes on certain timeperiods or people. I don't know what fields you would refer to where this is still commonplace but I'm both doubtful and haven't read it.
uziq
Member
+492|3450
larssen, you are talking total shit.

a PhD thesis has chapters, yes, but they are not 'bundles of articles'. in any case, it is a book length piece of research. it is the very minimum barrier of qualification into academia: a sustained piece of research. so for you to say that academics will 'stop requiring that they write books' is tantamount to saying that they will stop requiring a PhD. unlikely, and in any case entirely undesirable.

a collection of articles is not 'very different' from a book at all. a huge number of academic books available in university libraries are precisely edited volumes/collections. if you are taking out a book on any topic, there's a good chance it will have chapter-length contributions by many different academics. a bundled collection of articles is a VERY COMMON type of academic book.

no surprises you haven't read it. you are ignorant and clueless. that's okay. multi-volume pieces of work are still regularly produced, or at least, as regularly as they ever were, considering they represent literally a life-achievement.

here is a recent one to be reviewed in the LRB, for example.
https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/a-cultura … 474288149/

Last edited by uziq (2020-07-03 04:32:22)

Larssen
Member
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How am I talking total shit when I know people in my direct surroundings doing a PhD track as I've described? Several related articles, published seperately, after which it is bundled and presented for the PhD. That's two people I know getting their doctorate in computational mathematics and AI respectively.

As for the volumes: if you say so, but it was abundantly clear during my time close to academia that volumised works were the exception.

Last edited by Larssen (2020-07-03 04:34:16)

uziq
Member
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multi-volume works have always been the exception, dipshit. they are career-spanning efforts. you do realize when you go to a university library or study a course nowadays, you are looking at the sifted remains of 100s of years of research output, right? the vast majority of books fall out of print and become unavailable. no shit that the magisterial, career-defining multi-volume works tend to stick around longer. are you really this fucking dense?

a PhD is 100,000-150,000 words.

an average page of a typeset book will have 350 words per page (wpp) to 500 wpp on it, depending on whether you're producing a luxuriant edition with a new type and wide margins, or a paltry little edition with ant-writing. what's 125,000 divided by 400, larssen? every single fresh doctor graduating into the academic environment already has a book-length project waiting to be commissioned and sold/packaged to a publisher. so for you to claim that the academic practice of writing books is going to die out implies some very severe things about PhDs in general.

it's eye-opening and a little mindboggling how unawares you are.
Larssen
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+99|1885
I've seen finished PhD's of ~120 pages. The 100-150k words is not an iron rule across all fields at all.
uziq
Member
+492|3450
sure, in maths or science subjects where the majority of work takes place in proofs. but you're talking about academic monographs in your own subjects, not computer coding or physics.

in any case, 120 pages, 320 pages, what's the difference? these are books, by any definition. academics produce BOOKS! things that are necessarily much longer, more detailed, more thoroughly researched than your 'nothing over 50 pages is of any worth' argument.

you're contorting pretty hard here. so because you don't like reading books, academic books must be rubbish! suspect! they'll be gotten rid of one day! what do you mean PhD's are basically books? well i'm sure one day they'll change PhDs too!

just admit that you don't read much and move on. christ almighty. taking down the entire edifice of academia to suit your ego seems a little extreme. academic books have a purpose and a point. move on!

Last edited by uziq (2020-07-03 04:56:45)

Larssen
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The finished phd of 120 pages I was thinking about was in this case in conflict studies. Also a field that doesn't necessarily require enormous textual exposition, not my own masters though. I've seen that they're increasingly adopting this shift of article form publication within a topic to conclude the work as a phd in other fields too - which satisfies publishers as well, as it will count as multiple publications. There was a phd program in war studies doing the same thing.

No I didn't draw a direct line from my dislike of reading giant academic works to them being useless. I simply wondered if I should read more books and my conclusion was that no, most anything I want or need to know is available in article form and only in cases where I might want to dive into even more detailed proofs would I pick up a book. But even then: reading multiple articles might just be more productive. I acknowledged book publishing has value to academia: being, as you denoted it, dry, methodical, over-evidenced and repetitive. But it doesn't mean book-form reading is the be all end all and I'm missing out by not picking up the 300 page version of a deduced article. In some cases it might even pan out for the worse, such as the atrocious clash of civilisations.

Last edited by Larssen (2020-07-03 05:03:11)

uziq
Member
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there is no other way you can cut this, larssen. a PhD itself, the very minimum qualification for an academic (and rightfully so), is already a much more substantial piece of research than a journal article. you claimed that nothing over a >50 page journal article is really of any worth. i don't know what to even say to you at this point. you want to convolute the entire of academia to suit your reading preferences. too bad.

the 'clash of civilizations' was a crossover non-fiction general history book, not an academic monograph. it is what you would call a polemic. it has nothing like the rigour of an academic monograph, nor even a PhD. it was published by simon & schuster, not an academic press, which is generally a good indicator ffs. are you going to claim that psychology textbooks are Bad next because jordan peterson's '12 rules for life'?

it's amazing how poorly and confusedly you are making this argument. 'journal articles are better than academic books because the clash of civilizations was a tendentious bestseller!'

Last edited by uziq (2020-07-03 05:10:56)

Larssen
Member
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It was an article that was bloated to a book. I didn't check its academic merit for a minute because I assumed it was published academically considering the author's background. Enfin, I'm sure I could find another example in actual academic press but cba right now

Last edited by Larssen (2020-07-03 05:17:56)

uziq
Member
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really it's amazing how much you've sounded like jay these last 2 pages.

'i have thought and pondered why i don't read many books. and i have concluded that books, in fact, are bad'.
'why would anyone buy print books anyway? pretentious intellectual posers'.
'academic books are useless because i have no need of them'.
'i much prefer the illusion of knowledge gained from reading a few handy summaries'.
uziq
Member
+492|3450

Larssen wrote:

It was an article that was bloated to a book. I didn't check its academic merit for a minute because I assumed it was published academically considering the author's background. Enfin, I'm sure I could find another example in actual academic press but cba right now
well that's a very stupid assumption considering the majority of book sales and books published by volume are precisely 'general' trade books, not academic monographs. many academics publish regular books on the side, with an eye on a bigger audience. it's no different from brian cox or carlo rovelli or whoever presenting their astrophysics 'papers' as books on time, the universe, the wonder of it all, etc. etc. they are quite obviously and clearly NOT books of academic rigour, with everything backed-up and substantiated.

Last edited by uziq (2020-07-03 05:24:30)

Larssen
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Considering the idea started through a presentation at a think tank and it's often referenced in actual academic papers I'd say calling the assumption stupid is a bit of a stretch.

I still don't see how I'm wrong in not reading the 300 page book to glean knowledge of a subject. Wouldn't you agree it may also be more directly productive to dive into the academic discussion on the topic rather than the in depth proofs and arguments of a single author? In the time it takes you to consume the book you could read another 5 or 6 extensive reactions to it including the preceding or deduced paper.

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