A new collection brings together the perspectives of academics, publishers, librarians and booksellers to chart likely directions for the academic book.
It arose out of a partnership between the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the British Library, which kicked off in early 2014 with a call for researchers to run a project on the Academic Book of the Future.
A book of the same name is being launched during Academic Book Week on 13 November and is edited by principal investigator Samantha Rayner, senior lecturer in publishing at University College London, and research associate Rebecca Lyons.
Tom Mole, reader in English literature at the University of Edinburgh, notes that âthe constraints of the printed codexâ â such as its inability to incorporate audio, film, interactive maps or extensive datasets â have become ever more obvious, yet âsystemic factors combine to pressure scholars to write more of themâ.
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What we now require are academic books designed so as to be âfindable, citeable and readable in the long term, using as yet undeveloped toolsâŠThe academic book of the future will need to be future-proof.â
Kate Price, associate director (collections and research support) at Kingâs College London, reflects on âthe possibility that the academic book of the future could be entirely de-coupled from the concept of the library collectionâ and the many challenges of preserving born-digital information âat risk of loss almost as soon as it has been created, particularly if it includes social media elements, or if the technology upon which it is accessed becomes obsoleteâ.
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Meanwhile, Jaki Hawker, academic manager of Blackwellâs Edinburgh, sees a situation of âbloated product [prices], decreasing market and continued pressure to publishâ. Many of the most successful recent products have been âmixed media creations, available on at least two platforms, containing text which includes a high degree of personalised content [and] structured towards active rather than passive readingâ.
Yet ultimately it is readers who will determine the future of the academic book, in Ms Hawkerâs view, so the key question we ought to be asking is not âWhat does it look like?â but âDoes it sell?â
The Academic Book of the Future, edited by Samantha Rayner and Rebecca Lyons, is published this week by Palgrave Macmillan.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Monographâs future still a work in progress
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