ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

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How Much Does Our Language Shape The Ways We Think?

Many researchers find another reason to worry about the spread of English: the prospect of cognitive hegemony. Languages, they argue, influence how we perceive and respond to the world. The idiosyncrasies of English—its grammar, its concepts, its connection to Western culture—can jointly produce an arbitrary construction of reality. - The New Yorker

Salman Rushdie’s “Satanic Verses” Is Back In India’s Bookstores After 38-Year Ban

Then-prime minister Rajiv Gandhi blocked publication and import of the novel not long after it was released in 1988. Last month, when the government couldn't produce the relevant paperwork, a court overturned the ban. At least one New Delhi bookstore reports that sales are good. - The Guardian

The Birth Of The Christmas Card

As with so many innovations, the first Christmas card, sent out in 1843, was devised by a guy trying to avoid a big, tedious task. Reaction was mixed, and the temperance society was particularly upset. - BBC

The Top Ten Book-Business News Stories Of 2024

"PW looks back at the major contractions in the independent book distribution space, an explosion of artificial intelligence tools and businesses, turmoil over freedom of expression in multiple sectors, and more that defined the book business landscape throughout the year." - Publishers Weekly

How Encyclopedia Britannica Evolved (And Thrives) In The Age Of AI

Britannica has figured out not only how to survive, but also how to do well financially. Jorge Cauz, its chief executive, said in an interview that the publisher enjoyed pro forma profit margins of about 45 percent. - The New York Times

Publishing World Divided On Using AI To Make Books

Spines said it aims to help a million authors bring their stories to life—so they can focus on writing great books while A.I. handles the heavy lifting of publishing. - The Observer

In Canada The Wait To Check Out Library Books Can Be Over A Year

Despite offering 75 copies of the e-book, the library's waitlist currently sits at about 1,200 people. With a maximum borrowing period of 21 days, someone placing a hold on the e-book today could be waiting well over a year before it comes available. - CBC

How Big Publishers Killed The Novel

It’s convenient to assume that readers are to blame for killing literary fiction, and publishers have abandoned it because book-buyers are stupid, have bad taste, and just aren’t reading anymore. But what has actually occurred is death by committee. - Persuasion

Can Novelty Scores Change How Scientific Publishing Works?

The novelty score is calculated using an algorithm that compares the combinations of keywords and cited journals in a scientific manuscript with those in previous publications and projects the types of paper that will be published in the future. From this, it identifies novelty as deviations from these predictions. - Nature

How Did A Publishing Startup Land 25 Books On The Bestseller List In A Year?

So far this year, Bloom has landed 23 books and two series on the New York Times best-seller list. Last year, it surpassed $100 million in gross sales, and its 2024 sales are up 58 percent. - The New York Times

The Top 10 Bookselling Stories Of 2024

"We saw booksellers, publishers, and others in the industry step up to aid stores that sustained extensive hurricane damage, call for greater rights and representation for people with diverse identities, and more." - Publishers Weekly

This Upstart Publisher Got 25 Books On The Bestseller List In A Single Year

Three years ago, the only author on Bloom Books' list was E.L. James (the Fifty Shades of Grey series). Now it publishes over 40 authors, many previously self-published, will have well over $150 million in gross sales this year, and has nearly one-quarter of the lucrative romance market. - The New York Times

Remember, “A Christmas Carol” Is Not Dickens’s Only Christmas Story

It's not even Dickens's only Christmas ghost story. And some of them are much weirder and more unsettling than the famous one. - Literary Hub

How The Politics Of Smell In Prose Broke The Internet

I wanted to share with my academic network, so I posted a photo of myself holding a physical copy of my PhD thesis on X. The post amassed 120 million views and sparked a lot of anger in response to its title: Olfactory Ethics: The Politics of Smell in Modern and Contemporary Prose. - The Conversation

What Did The 20th Century Novel Accomplish? Anything?

The genre’s masterworks urge us to set a slower pace, savoring what each novelist puts on the table and realizing, as we push back our chairs, how much more substantial the meal was than what we thought we wanted. - The Baffler

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