• newsletters • best of austin • find a paper • submit an event • advertise with us • contact • jobs •
HOME: MARCH 14, 2003: SCREENS
text size

Snippets From SXSW Interactive 2003

BY BELINDA ACOSTA

Book Culture 2003: For Whom the Web Tolls (March 10, 10-11am)

In Print: From Passion to Publish (March 10, 11:30am-12:30pm)

It wasn't that long ago that the Chicken Littles were saying the Web would be the death of books. In 2003, nothing could be further from the truth. The written word is alive and well, in print and on the Web. Today, the question is: What is the relationship between the Web and readers, writers and publishers?

"The e-book readers of 2000 -- that has been put to rest and is seen as a failure in publishing circles," said Kevin Smokler, a San Francisco Chronicle critic (and formerly of CentralBooking.com, a site for book lovers). E-books were supposed to be the toehold for ink-and-paper publishers in the Web world. But poor proprietary formats and few downloadable titles killed the venture, along with the simple fact that "there's still a thrill in holding a book in your hand," said online celebrity Ben Brown. Brown is creator of SoNewMedia.com, a micropublisher that specializes in finding and publishing writers whose work originally appeared on the Internet.

While the Internet has provided a new model for publishing, it's done something even more revolutionary -- it provides a new intermediary between reader and writer. Micropublishers, Web log reviewers, and Web sites like EatMoreWords.com and Readerville.com have expanded the discussion of writing and books from longtime bastions like The New York Times Review of Books into the immediate, less buttoned-down world of the Internet.

While traditional publishers have been remarkably slow to realize the full potential of the Web, Smokler points to writers like Neal Pollack who use the Internet to connect to his readers. "No one is going to know you're a writer unless you tell them," Smokler says.

Personal Web journals or Web logs are good ways for writers to develop a voice and find and build an audience. But what becomes of all this digital production? That's what librarian Carrie Bickner wants to know. As assistant director for Digital Information and System Design for the New York Library, she focuses on discovering ways to preserve digital culture for future generations.

"How will we know [Web author Cory] Doctorow's process years from now? What is the digital object, and what piece of it should be saved and stored?" are a few of the questions her work addresses. The answer? Just like new writing on the Web, it's all a work in progress.


MORE SNIPPETS FROM SXSW INTERACTIVE 2003
 
Share Digg Twitter Facebook Del.icio.us LinkedLn Email Print article


POST A COMMENT

(optional):
:

Permission to Print. Letter to the editor.
 
RELATED STORIES


Snippets From SXSW Interactive 2003

User Not Found: Dealing With the Death of Online Friends

I, Cyborg

Doug Lenat Keynote Speech

Some Rights Reserved: The Creative Commons Project

People Whose Lives Have Been Changed by the Web

Journalism: Old vs. New

Trends in How the Internet Connects People

Book Culture 2003: For Whom the Web Tolls (March 10, 10-11am); In Print: From Passion to Publish (March 10, 11:30am-12:30pm)

Why I Dig Working in the Cultural Gutter

Computers vs. Blackboards: Net Learning or Not Learning?

The Hollywood Agenda

The Upside of the Downturn

Tomorrow Now

Until the Light Takes Us

BLOGS
The Totally Awesome AusChron Newscast is Playing With Fire
Perry Clears Way for Executioner
Doing 25 to Life

Bradley Spars With Lawmakers
Bill Narum: We Call That Art
AE's Coal Conundrum

ARCHIVES
More from
March 14, 2003
News
Arts
Books
Food
Screens
Music
Columns

Browse the
Archives by
Issue
Author
Column
Review
Section


Short Story Contest
Online Contests
Chrontourage
Chronicle Merch

 
Arts & Entertainment (108)
Services (108)
Civic (20)
Retail (48)
Food & Drink (67)
Coupons (8)
Jobs (9)

Ads of the Day