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Introduction

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Part of the book series: New Directions in Book History ((NDBH))

Abstract

Prior to the expansion of digital technologies around reading, teachers, parents, and librarians were the primary gatekeepers responsible for getting books into the hands of young people, and researching readers was an elusive process. But a combination of convergence in the publishing industry and the development of new digital technologies around reading have enabled publishers to create disintermediated digital enclosures in which they can communicate directly with their reading audience. Access to their favorite authors attracts teen readers to the sites, where they are encouraged to participate via quizzes and games, to act as peer-to-peer reviewers and marketers, and even to have an authorial role as content creators or contributors. Within these online collaborative communities around reading, the construct of Iser’s (1974) largely invisible “implied reader” is replaced by a visible and vocal reading audience. By examining three progressive case studies of reading-related websites for young people: Random Buzzers.com, which was Random House’s interactive website for teen readers; Hachette’s the Twilight Saga.com (based on the books in the Twilight series by Stephenie Meyer); and The Amanda Project.com as evidence of such visible audiences, this book exposes how teens contribute their immaterial and affective labor as they engage in participatory reading experiences via publishers’ and authors’ interactive websites and use of social media, and how in turn publishers are able to exploit such labor as they get invaluable market research, peer-to-peer recommendations, and even content which can be used in other projects—all virtually free-of-charge. As young adult literary content moves from print to digital formats, this book will demonstrate how the roles of “author,” “marketer,” and “reviewer” are being redefined, and present a twenty-first century configuration in the field of cultural production for young people.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    The Rainbow Fish by Marcus Pfister (1992) was the first foil-stamped picture book.

  2. 2.

    Kirkus Reviews was an early review journal founded by former Harper editor Virginia Kirkus in 1933.

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Martens, M. (2016). Introduction. In: Publishers, Readers, and Digital Engagement. New Directions in Book History. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-51446-2_1

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