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- From: sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com (Fred Welden)
- Subject: Government-funded publishing
- Originator: sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com
- Sender: news@unx.sas.com (Noter of Newsworthy Events)
- Message-ID: <BzCvxx.DE@unx.sas.com>
- Date: Wed, 16 Dec 1992 14:22:44 GMT
- Nntp-Posting-Host: dobo.unx.sas.com
- Organization: Dobonia
- Lines: 137
-
-
- Wow! Take a couple days off with a sick kid and suddenly there's
- forty-something posts in this government support for the arts thread.
-
- Scanning them all has been something like flying at low altitude over
- a south Louisiana gas field--flames shooting up everywhere, and from
- time to time there's this incredible stench. But there have also been
- some very worthwhile perspectives on the idea, and I'd like to add
- my own particular 2 cents worth and draw a few flames myself. So
- here goes:
-
- The question of whether it is moral to use tax money to fund the
- production and dissemination of art that does not have the unanimous
- approval of the taxpayers is not terribly interesting to me. This is
- but a pale shadow of the one true and eternal thread that I used to
- participate in when alt.society.civil-liberty was permitted here in
- Dobonia. The question that interests me more, and I think ought to
- be of interest to the writers on this group, is the question of whether
- government funding of writing actually serves any purpose.
-
- What ought to be achieved by government support of the literary arts?
-
- We should not look to the government to support the writers themselves.
- Provided that the government is doing all it ought to see to it that
- no one is unfairly deprived of employment, a writer has as good a chance
- as anyone of managing to survive while he or she gets some writing
- done. Instead, we should look to the government to provide for the
- availability and survival of written works that have no chance of
- achieving those things in the free marketplace.
-
- In other words, the government should publish works of little or no
- commercial potential and make them available at a minimal price.
-
- Contemporaries will judge most of them to be crap, or pretentious
- posturings requiring a guidebook and lexicon to interpret. In the
- future, some of these works will be recognized as groundbreaking
- experiments in written communication, the seeds of new ways of writing.
- It is impossible to say, today, which works these will be--it is in the
- nature of groundbreaking experimentation that it almost always appears
- to have no practical worth at the time, and is only valued in
- retrospect.
-
- Because such experimental work rarely seems to have any contemporary
- merit, no commercial publishing house can be expected to provide this
- service. The forces of the free market will invariably steer publishers
- away from the very works that should be preserved and made available to
- the experimentors who want to build on these new directions.
-
- Note that writers, especially writers of long works, are at a
- disadvantage with regard to experimentation in comparison to visual
- artists. A painter who has broken totally new ground may never sell a
- painting (Van Gogh, I'm told, sold exactly one in his lifetime) and die
- an unknown, but future artists who look at his work need only look at it
- to see what is there. The finished manuscript of a novelist, however,
- is by no means as accessible until it has been typeset and bound.
- Likewise, I can make a photo slide of a Van Gogh painting and mail it to
- an artist friend of mine with very little effort or expense, and the
- slide serves to give a decent impression of the original work. The
- expense of duplicating a novel and mailing it is prohibitively higher.
- Thus, government funding of the reproduction and dissemination of
- experimental written art would provide a real benefit to all literary
- artists--not just those whose works are selected for support.
-
- Not only that, it's cheap. Say the US govt gave away 10,000 copies each
- of 50 novels a month to libraries and academic institutions--600 titles
- a year. That's the output of a respectable publishing house. They
- would cost something like $2 to $4 each to produce. That's a total cost
- to the taxpayer of $12 to $24 million per year. In governmental terms
- that's negligible. Presumably costs could be cut further by actually
- selling copies to avant-garde private individuals at or slightly above
- cost, thus increasing the print runs.
-
-
- Now to address some specific comments I've seen here:
-
- Alan Barclay writes:
-
- |If Canada's literary funding is guilty of anything, it's encouraging
- |"Frontier Stories", "immigrant stories" and other "cultural" literature and
- |ignoring genre work. Apparently they don't believe genre literature can
- |express any Canadian Character.
-
- I don't know what gets supported by the Arts Councils, but in the system
- I described above, no manuscript that could easily be described as
- belonging to any large class of already-published books would be likely
- to make the cut. So genre writing, unless it broke radical new ground,
- would be out. Likewise the frontier stories and so on.
-
- Nigel Ling writes:
-
- |There cannot be a precise definition but there is no doubt in my
- |mind that there is writing which is literature and there is writing
- |which is not. However, I said nothing about burning anything. There
- |is nothing `wrong' with popular writing; but there is something
- |wrong when literary work cannot get published because it doesn't
- |sell as well as pulp.
-
- This is very close to my point: the government should support work
- that has no commercial potential, because there's plenty of work
- already available that does have commercial potential. Each kind of
- writing has its own merits, but the non-commercial kind simply
- disappears, so its merits are not appreciated, and the wheels invented
- by its authors must constantly be re-invented, as there is no published
- record of them.
-
- Mark Brownell writes:
-
- |3) "What is Art?": Who is to determine which project is valid and which
- |is not? The acceptance of one applicant automatically means the
- |exclusion of another.
-
- A few simple rules. First, the work in hand must have been rejected by
- a significant number of appropriate commercial publishers. Second, all
- submissions are grouped by the reviewing board into piles of works whose
- lack of commercial appeal stems from similar grounds. For example,
- books that deliberately disrupt the chronological flow of events, books
- written in invented languages, books that simply seem to be badly
- written, and so on. The sample judged most representative of each pile
- is chosen. If there are publication slots unfilled, start splitting up
- the piles into subclassifications until all slots get filled. If there
- are too many books for the slots, eliminate the representatives of the
- largest piles first--whatever form that is, it apparently needs little
- encouragement to survive.
-
- and he writes:
-
- |4) Artists turn into grant writers! There are many out there who have
- |evolved into great grant writers but have lost their artististic ability
- |along the way!
-
- My scheme wouldn't give any grants to anybody. It would simply create
- cheap government-issue books that couldn't otherwise survive in the free
- market.
-
- --
- --Fred, or another blind 8th-century BC | sasafw@dobo.unx.sas.com
- Hellenic poet of the same name. |
-