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By the book. The book and the study of its digital transformation

By the book. The book and the study of its digital transformation

Publié le par Perrine Coudurier (Source : Benoît Berthou)

 

By the Book: the book and the study of its digital transformation

Publishing Studies Conference

 

Villa Finaly, Florence, Italy

May 22 and 23, 2014

 

Organization

Benoît Berthou (Sorbonne Paris Cité University, LABSIC-Research Center for Information and Communication Sciences, France)

Miha Kovač (University of Lubjana, Slovenia)

Angus Phillips (Oxford Bookes University, International Center for Publishing Studies, United Kingdom)

 

This two-day conference brings together scholars from the field of publishing studies to examine key issues around the digital transformation of the book, as well as to discuss the developing field of publishing studies.

 

Friday May 22

 

9AM

 

Opening – Benoît Berthou, Miha Kovacs, Angus Phillips

 

9:20AM -11AM

Session 1 – Book globalizations and national identities

 

  • Frania Hall (London College of Communication, United Kingdom), “Digital convergence and collaboration culture – Publishing in the context of the wider creative industries”
  • Melanie Ramdarshan-Bold (Loughborough College, United Kingdom), “National and Regional Identity in a Global Context: Cultural Constructions in the Globalised Publishing Field”
  • Elena Macevičiute and Tom Wilson (Borås University College, Sweden), “The e-book phenomenon in Sweden”
  • Daniel Boswell (Anglia Ruskin University, United Kingdom), “Catalan publishing in Twentieth Century”

 

Pause

 

11:20AM-1PM

Session 2 - Understanding innovation

 

  • Gavin Stewart (University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom), “Foucault’s Ghost?: The Phenomenology of Privacy and Breach within the E-reading Experience”
  • Alexis Weedon (University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom), “A leap in innovation? The digital book as disruptive technology”
  • Claudio Pires Franco (University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom), “The digital book (r)evolution: barriers to innovatio”
  • Rose Leighton (Hogeschool van Amsterdam, Netherland), “A Publishing Studies Museum”

 

Lunch

 

2PM-3:40PM

Session 3 - Readership evolution ?

 

  • Nick Canty (University College London, United Kingdom), “Books, bricks and literary boosters”
  • Iain Stevenson (University College London, United Kingdom), “"The gift is mine, the choice is thine":  Book Tokens and the expansion of reading”
  • Laura Dietz (Anglia Ruskin University, United Kingdom), “Life as a novel after death as a book? Reputation and legitimacy of post-print fiction”
  • Louis Wiart (Sorbonne Paris Cité University, France), “The Economics and Business Models of Book Social Networks in France”

 

4PM-5PM

Session 5 – Book sectors 2: Academic publishing

 

  • Lara Speicher (University College London, United Kingdom), “Open Access Publishing of Scholarly Monographs in Universities”
  • Mary Ann Kernan (City University London, United Kingdom), “The impact of globalisation on academic publishing: A Routledge case study, 1960 to 2013”

 

Saturday May 23

 

9AM-10:40AM

Session 4 - Book sectors 1: Fiction and travelling

 

  • Heiko Hartmann (Leipzig University of Applied Sciences, Germany), “How digital publishing creates new kinds of printed books. The evolution of non-fiction (travel guides, atlases, cookbooks) in print”
  • Rachel Noorda (University of Stirling, Scotland), “Books as Souvenirs: The Tourism and Heritage Book Market”
  • Katharina Reeve (Bath Spa University, United Kingdom), “The Creative Producer 2020: Nonfiction and Digital New Product Development”

 

Pause

11AM-1PM

Session 7 – Toward new teaching models ?

 

  • Judith Watts (Kingston University, London, United Kingdom), “Catching up with the past: the use of historical case studies in a contemporary curriculum”
  • Anke Vogel, Corinna Norrick-Ruhl (Mainz Book Studies, Germany), “Teaching Sustainability: Bringing “Green Publishing” to the Book Studies Classroom
  • Liam Borgstrom (university of Pretoria, South Africa), “Teaching Publishing Architecture”
  • Sophie Noel (Sorbonne Paris Cité University, France), “Is there a specific approach to publishing studies in France? Provisional assessment and methodological proposals”

 

2PM-3PM

Session 6 - Teaching publishing at the digital age

 

  • Elizabeth le Roux (University of Pretoria, South Africa), “How should we teach book publishing in this time of digital transformation? A view from the South”
  • Anna Faherty (Kingston University, United Kingdom), “Pedagogy for Digital Publishing”

 

Pause

3:20PM-5PM

Session 8 – Studying publishing

 

  • Nives Tomašević, Ivana Ljevak (University of Zadar, Croatia), “The current state of publishing studies in Croatia”
  • Stevie Marsden (University of Stirling, Scotland), “By the Book: the book and the study of its digital transformation”
  • Zoran Velagić, Franjo Pehar (University of Zadar, Croatia), “Methodological approaches to modern publishing: current constrains and future prospects”
  • Bertrand Legendre (Sorbonne Paris Cité University, France), “Publishing researches: the Socio-economical approach”

 

5PM

Conclusions – Benoît Berthou, Miha Kovač, Angus Phillips