On Sat, Jan 25, 2014 at 10:26 AM, Louis Proyect <[email protected]> wrote:

> https://chroniclevitae.com/news/291-what-s-the-point-of-academic-publishing
>


http://academeblog.org/2014/01/25/the-point-of-academic-publishing/
--------------------------snip
On the other hand, there is, certainly, a type of publishing that retains
the appellation "academic," but it is becoming less and less important to
scholarly communities. It is based in peer-reviewed journals of smaller and
smaller distribution thanks, in part, to corporate ownership interested in
keeping work behind paywalls. For this same reason, it now has minuscule
impact on the public sphere-and is, therefore, merely a pale reflection of
what academic publishing once was, when academic journals were readily
available in libraries and scholars' homes and when there were, quick
frankly, only a few of them.

Yet there is another, more expansive type (or definition) of "academic"
publishing, and it is on the verge of consuming the old one. Most of us in
scholarly communities know this and are adjusting to it-both in our own
writings and our judgments on the efforts of others. After all, we are
involved in it, in blogs, in open-access publishing, in the use of social
networking, in all sorts of things that are making academic publishing
quite a different creature from what it was even a decade ago.

To put it simply, Kendzior is only seeing a part of the picture-and in a
dichotomy of black and white. Academic publishing and non-academic
publishing. She even quotes a professor who is giving up on blogging
because it takes too much time away from the 'real' work of an academic.
Neither she nor the professor she cites seem to see the changes that have
been going on this past decade and more, the expansion of academic
publishing into new and vigorous venues along with the shrinking of the
importance of traditional academic publishing venues. Scholars in all
fields are struggling to find ways of bringing the new publishing
possibilities into hiring, tenure, promotion and re-appointment
decision-making in a coherent fashion-and most of them are already
considering them as valid parts (in many cases-there are problems arising
from the changes, too, after all) of scholarship.

There is also, within many contemporary college and university
administrations, a growing recognition that the most important scholarship
is that which extends beyond a narrow cadre of specialists. The
institutions are looking for people who can publish in a wider variety of
venues than their older colleagues ever considered. Yes, traditional
academic journals still hold an important place within ivory towers, but
those towers themselves are beginning to fall, the distinction of inside
and outside fading just as divisions in types of publishing do.

To me, the most problematic of Kendzior's comments is this:

Most scholars hesitate to take this approach ["a hybrid approach that
combines academic rigor with public accessibility"] even when their writing
has had proven appeal, for it appeals to those who do not "count".

That might have been true even a decade ago, but it is not really true
today. We scholars have learned a great deal as a result of the digital
revolution, including that there are not very many people who do not
"count."

The point of academic publishing today is to reach as many different
audiences as possible. In differing ways through distinct venues and
language appropriate to each audience, scholars are expanding how they
present their information, which is also changing how they think about what
they do and have done.
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