Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Africa Unchained: African Publishers and it's Writers

...almost all African creative writing that gains any level of worldly significance, no matter how ephemeral, is published by a Western publishing company. Even when a writer is first published on the continent, their success is ultimately measured in terms of how effectively their work gets a foot in the Occidental door. This should not be surprising to anyone on a moment?s reflection. The West has been the centre of capital accumulation for the past 400 years or so. Fiction writing is simply another form of capital whose value is formed and transacted in London or New York (for the English-speaking world), like copper and coffee. Everything else is marginalia and mere froth on the daydream.

African publishers are not even minnows swimming in the shark tank in comparison. They leave little or no imprint in the minds of readers and writers. African writers often view African publishers as printers to make their books available in their home country. Demands that would not be made of Western publishers are insisted upon. Typical requests are: ?This is the title I am using? (never mind its meaninglessness in the local context); ?I am not happy with the choice of paper used to print my book?; ?Why is my book not available in other African markets which you have rights to?? (As if the Western publisher with world rights would also care about those markets).

Source: http://africaunchained.blogspot.com/2013/02/african-publishers-and-its-writers.html

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