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Diana Rosen's avatar

This is another false equivalency and specious argument for fees. No one submitting a novel or book of poems or book of short stories to a legitimate publisher pays a fee unless that publisher is a "vanity press". No one. No one submitting story ideas or stories to niche or general interest magazines pays for that. No one. ONLY literary journals ask for fees to be rejected or accepted. That's because few journals will do the work it takes to find patrons, sponsors, advertisers or other means of support. It is egregiously wrong headed that some universities are scrapping previously strong departments of literature, the source for student workers on university-sponsored journals. This not only harms the growth of literature teaching, it harms the principles of foundational and broad education for the immediate lure of departments for purely financial reasons vs reasons to support learning in the humanities. That's a whole other discussion. Will a lot of journals close of poets and flash writers stop paying fees? Yes, and that's fine. The number of publications now hovers near 3000, far too many to be financially feasible and many are vanity projects for the publishers and editors. I implore journal staffs to approach their publications like all professional publishers and seek financial support via advertising, grants, and sponsors. Be creative and wild. Think of it as saving the arts and humanities of this part of our culture. And, pay the writers! Pay the staff. Otherwise, you're hobbyists, not business people, and publishers ARE business people, creating exciting reading for people to enjoy.

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Kayleigh Shoen's avatar

Reading this during the WGA writers strike is ... really something. What's at stake is not really the submission fees, it's the lack of recompense at any point in the process. To expect writers to pay to have their work published, pay again for a copy of the publication, and never receive a measly cent in return amounts to giving the work of writers a negative valuation (even before figuring in the cost of a computer, word processing program, internet, etc.). I wouldn't have thought to apply the word "pirate" but now that you mention it...

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