Dictionary Definition
publish
Verb
1 put into print; "The newspaper published the
news of the royal couple's divorce"; "These news should not be
printed" [syn: print]
2 prepare and issue for public distribution or
sale; "publish a magazine or newspaper" [syn: bring out,
put out,
issue, release]
3 have (one's written work) issued for
publication; "How many books did Georges Simenon write?"; "She
published 25 books during her long career" [syn: write]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- pŭb'lĭsh, /ˈpʌblɪʃ/, /"pVblIS/
Verb
- : To issue a publication.
- : To issue something (usually printed work) for sale and distribution.
- : To announce to the public.
Derived terms
Translations
to issue a publication
- Czech: vydat
- German: herausgeben
- Italian: pubblicare
- Portuguese: publicar
to issue something (usually printed work) for
sale and distribution
- Arabic:
- Chinese: 出版 (chūbǎn)
- Dutch: publiceren
- Finnish: kustantaa
- French: publier
- German: herausgeben, veröffentlichen
- Hungarian: kiadni
- Icelandic: gefa út
- Italian: pubblicare
- Japanese: 出版する (しゅっぱんする, shuppan suru)
- Korean: 출판하다 (chulpanhada)
- Kurdish:
- Portuguese: publicar
- Russian: издавать (izdavát’)
- Spanish: publicar
- Swedish: offentliggöra
to announce to the public
- Finnish: julkaista
- German: veröffentlichen
- Hungarian: közölni
- Italian: rendere noto, divulgare
- Portuguese: publicar, anunciar
- ttbc Korean: 출판하다 (chulpanhada)
- ttbc Telugu: ప్రచురించు (prachurimchu)
Extensive Definition
Publishing is the process of production and
dissemination of literature or information – the
activity of making information available for public view. In some
cases authors may be their own publishers, meaning; originators and
developers of
content also provide media
to deliver and display the content.
Traditionally, the term refers to the
distribution of printed works such as books (the "book trade") and
newspapers. With the
advent of digital information systems and the Internet, the
scope of publishing has expanded to include electronic resources,
such as the electronic versions of books and periodicals, as well
as websites, blogs, games and the like.
Publishing includes the stages of the
development, acquisition, copyediting, graphic design, production
– printing
(and its electronic
equivalents), and marketing and distribution
of newspapers, magazines, books, literary
works, musical
works, software and
other works dealing with information, including the electronic
media.
Publication is also important as a legal concept: (1) as the process of
giving formal notice to the world of a significant intention, for
example, to marry or enter bankruptcy; (2) as the essential
precondition of being able to claim defamation; that is, the
alleged libel must have
been published, and (3) for copyright purposes, where
there is a difference in the protection of published and
unpublished works.
The process of publishing
Submission by author or agent
Book and magazine publishers spend a lot of their
time buying or commissioning copy. At a small press, it is possible
to survive by relying entirely on commissioned material. But as
activity increases, the need for works may outstrip the publisher's
established circle of writers.
Writers often first submit a query letter or
proposal. The majority of unsolicited submissions come from
previously unpublished authors. When such manuscripts are
unsolicited, they must go through the slush pile, in
which acquisitions editors sift through to identify manuscripts of
sufficient quality or revenue potential to be referred to the
editorial staff. Established authors are often represented by a
literary
agent to market their work to publishers and negotiate
contracts.
Acceptance and negotiation
Once a work is accepted, commissioning editors negotiate the purchase of intellectual property rights and agree on royalty rates.The authors of traditional printed materials sell
exclusive territorial intellectual property rights that match the
list of countries in
which distribution is proposed (i.e. the rights match the legal
systems under which copyright protections can be enforced). In the
case of books, the publisher and writer must also agree on the
intended formats of publication -— mass-market paperback, "trade"
paperback and hardback are the most common options.
The situation is slightly more complex if
electronic formatting is to be used. Where distribution is to be by
CD-ROM or
other physical media, there is no reason to treat this form
differently from a paper format, and a national copyright is an
acceptable approach. But the possibility of Internet download
without the ability to restrict physical distribution within
national boundaries presents legal problems that are usually solved
by selling language or translation rights rather than national
rights. Thus, Internet access across the European
Union is relatively open because of the laws forbidding
discrimination based on nationality, but the fact of publication
in, say, France, limits the target market to those who read
French.
Having agreed on the scope of the publication and
the formats, the parties in a book agreement must then agree on
royalty
rates, the percentage of the gross retail price that will be
paid to the author, and the advance
payment. This is difficult because the publisher must estimate
the potential sales in each market and balance projected revenue
against production costs. Royalties usually range between 10-12% of
recommended retail price. An advance is usually 1/3 of first print
run total royalties. For example, if a book has a print run of 5000
copies and will be sold at $14.95 and the author receives 10%
royalties, the total sum payable to the author if all copies are
sold is $7475 (10% x $14.95 x 5000). The advance in this instance
would roughly be $2490. Advances vary greatly between books, with
established authors commanding large advances.
Editorial stage
Once the immediate commercial decisions are taken
and the technical legal issues resolved, the author may be asked to
improve the quality of the work through rewriting or smaller
changes, and the staff will edit the work. Publishers may
maintain a house style,
and staff will copy edit to
ensure that the work matches the style and grammatical requirements
of each market. Editing may also involve structural changes and
requests for more information. Some publishers employ fact
checkers.
Prepress
When a final text is agreed upon, the next phase is design. This may include artwork being commissioned or confirmation of layout. In publishing, the word "art" also indicates photographs. This process prepares the work for printing through processes such as typesetting, dust jacket composition, specification of paper quality, binding method and casing, and proofreading.The activities of typesetting, page layout, the
production of negatives, plates from the negatives and, for
hardbacks, the preparation of brasses for the spine legend and
imprint are now all
computerized. Prepress computerization evolved mainly in about the
last twenty years of the 20th century. If the work is to be
distributed electronically, the final files are saved as formats
appropriate to the target operating systems of the hardware used
for reading. These may include PDF files.
Publishing as a business
The publisher usually controls the advertising and other
marketing tasks, but
may subcontract
various aspects of the process described above. In smaller
companies, editing, proofreading and layout might be done by
freelancers.
Dedicated in-house salespeople are rapidly being
replaced by specialized companies who handle sales to bookshops,
wholesalers and chain stores for a fee. This trend is accelerating
as retail book chains and supermarkets have centralized their
buying.
If the entire process up to the stage of printing
is handled by an outside company or individuals, and then sold to
the publishing company, it is known as book
packaging. This is a common strategy between smaller publishers
in different territorial markets where the company that first buys
the intellectual property rights then sells a package to other
publishers and gains an immediate return on capital invested.
Indeed, the first publisher will often print sufficient copies for
all markets and thereby get the maximum quantity efficiency on the
print run for all.
Some businesses maximize their profit margins
through vertical
integration; book publishing is not one of them. Although
newspaper and magazine companies still often own printing presses
and binderies, book publishers rarely do. Similarly, the trade
usually sells the finished products through a distributor who stores and
distributes the publisher's wares for a percentage fee or sells on
a sale or return basis.
The advent of the Internet has therefore posed an
interesting question that challenges publishers, distributors and
retailers. In 2005, Amazon.com
announced its purchase of Booksurge and selfsanepublishing, a major
print on
demand operation. This is probably intended as a preliminary
move towards establishing an Amazon imprint. One of the largest
bookseller chains, Barnes & Noble, already runs its own
successful imprint with both new titles and classics — hardback
editions of out-of-print former best sellers. Similarly, Ingram
Industries, parent company of Ingram Book Group (a leading US book
wholesaler), now includes its own print-on-demand division called
Lightning Source. Among publishers, Simon
& Schuster recently announced that it will start selling
its backlist titles directly to consumers through its
website.
Book clubs are almost entirely direct-to-retail,
and niche publishers pursue a mixed strategy to sell through all
available outlets — their output is insignificant to the major
booksellers, so lost revenue poses no threat to the traditional
symbiotic relationships between the four activities of printing,
publishing, distribution and retail.
Academic publishing
The development of the printing press represented a revolution for communicating the latest hypotheses and research results to the academic community and supplemented what a scholar could do personally. But this improvement in the efficiency of communication created a challenge for libraries which have had to accommodate the weight and volume of literature.To understand the scale of the problem, consider
that approximately two centuries ago the number of scientific
papers published annually was doubling every fifteen years. Today,
the number of published papers doubles about every ten years.
Modern academics can now run electronic journals and distribute
academic materials without the need for publishers. Not
surprisingly, publishers perceive this emancipation as a serious
threat to their business. In reality, the interests of scholars and
publishers have long been in conflict. Scholars desire unlimited
access, while publishers need to control distribution to maintain
the source of revenue.
Today, publishing academic journals and textbooks
is a large part of an international industry. The shares of the
major publishing companies are listed on national stock exchanges
and management policies must satisfy the dividend expectations of
international shareholders. Critics claim that these standardised
accounting and profit-oriented policies have displaced the
publishing ideal of providing access to all. In contrast to the
commercial model, there is non-profit
publishing, where the publishing organization is either organised
specifically for the purpose of publishing, such as a university
press, or is one of the functions of an organisation such as a
medical charity, founded to achieve specific practical goals. An
alternative approach to the corporate model is open access,
the online distribution of individual articles and academic
journals without charge to readers and libraries.
A somewhat related development is open source
publishing, which is participatory group editing, as exemplified by
various wiki projects, such
Wikipedia,
Wikiversity,
and Citizendium.
Tie-in publishing
Technically, radio, television, cinemas, VCDs and
DVDs, music systems, games, computer hardware and mobile telephony
publish information to their audiences. Indeed, the marketing of a
major film often includes a novelization, a graphic
novel or comic version, the soundtrack album, a game, model, toys
and endless promotional publications.
Some of the major publishers have entire
divisions devoted to a single franchise, e.g. Ballantine Del Rey
Lucasbooks has the exclusive rights to Star Wars in the United
States; Random House UK (Bertelsmann)/Century LucasBooks holds the
same rights in the United Kingdom. The game industry self-publishes
through BL Publishing/Black Library (Warhammer) and
Wizards of the Coast (Dragonlance,
Forgotten
Realms, etc). The BBC has its own publishing division which
does very well with long-running series such as Doctor Who.
These multimedia works are cross-marketed aggressively and sales
frequently outperform the average stand-alone published work,
making them a focus of corporate interest.
Independent publishing alternatives
See also Alternative mediaWriters in a specialized field or with a narrower
appeal have found smaller alternatives to the mass market in the
form of small presses
and self-publishing.
More recently, these options include print on
demand and ebook
format. These publishing alternatives provide an avenue for authors
who believe that mainstream publishing will not meet their needs or
who are in a position to make more money from direct sales than
they could from bookstore sales, such as
popular speakers who sell books after speeches. Authors are more
readily published by this means due to the much lower costs
involved.
References
- Epstein, Jason. Book Business: Publishing Past, Present, and Future.
- Schiffrin, André (2000). The Business of Books: How the International Conglomerates Took Over Publishing and Changed the Way We Read.
- Ugrešić, Dubravka (2003). Thank You for Not Reading.
- Abelson et al (2005). Open Networks and Open Society: The Relationship between Freedom, Law, and Technology
See also
Publishing on specific contexts:
Publishing tools:
External links
publish in Arabic: نشر
publish in German: Edition
publish in Esperanto: Eldonejo
publish in Spanish: Publicación
publish in French: Édition (document)
publish in Hindi: प्रकाशन
publish in Italian: Editoria
publish in Hebrew: הוצאה לאור
publish in Macedonian: Издаваштво
publish in Japanese: 出版
publish in Dutch: Uitgeverij
publish in Portuguese: Editoração
publish in Russian: Издательское дело
publish in Sicilian: Pubbricazzioni
publish in Tamil: பதிப்பகம்
publish in Turkish: Yayınevi
publish in Ukrainian: Видавнича справа
publish in Yiddish: דרוקעריי
publish in Chinese: 出版
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
advertise, air, announce, annunciate, bestrew, break it to, break the
news, breathe, bring
out, broach, broadcast, bruit about,
circumfuse, come out
with, confide, confide
to, deal out, diffract,
diffuse, disclose, dispense, disperse, dispread, disseminate, distribute, diverge, divulgate, divulge, engrave, evulgate, express, fan out, get out, give
out, give vent to, hectograph, impress, imprint, issue, leak, let get around, let in on,
let out, make known, make public, market, mimeograph, multigraph, out with,
overprint, overscatter, oversow, overspread, print, proclaim, produce, promulgate, proof, propagate, prove, publicize, pull, pull a proof, put forth, put
out, put to bed, put to press, radiate, reissue, report, reprint, retail, reveal, run, run off, scatter, sow, sow broadcast, splay, spread, spread about, spread out,
stamp, strew, strike, tell, toot, utter, vent, ventilate