|
Publishing
Publishing and pulping the ancient classicsPosted by Joel Martinsen, October 31, 2007 6:30 PM
![]() In this house there are many Mansions. Visit the classics section of a Chinese bookstore looking for one of the Four Classic Novels and your eyes might glaze over as you survey the choices before you. Critical editions, photo-reproductions, illustrated abridgements, and graphic novel versions line the shelves. Recent GAPP data cited in a Mirror article last month revealed that between 1950 and 2005, more than 230 different editions of Dream of the Red Mansions were published, along with over 210 editions of Romance of the Three Kingdoms and over 190 versions each of Outlaws of the Marsh and Journey to the West. A survey of the current inventory of the Beijing Book Building found 94 separate Red Mansions editions issued by 66 different publishers. Not all of these books are selling, however. GAPP numbers have nearly 50 billion yuan worth of books warehoused every year (based on cover price). The Mirror calculates that since reprinted classics make up around 40% of a given year's titles, they must make up the same percentage of warehoused books, though the paper's figures are used somewhat haphazardly. At any rate, it makes for a stunning headline: "20 billion yuan worth of reprinted classics get pulped every year." What attracts publishers to the classics? Money, for one thing. Of those 94 editions, 56 were literary editions and 38 were children's books. The literary editions had an average price of 60 yuan; the Mirror estimates the cost per book at one-third of the cover price, or around 20 yuan. For many resource-poor publishing houses, issuing new editions of classics is a moneymaking shortcut. On the other hand, not all classics are in oversupply. Writing in The Beijing News last week, Wang Dong discussed the difficulties that book lovers have in tracking down the only editions of classics that have long been out of print:
The imbalance doesn't have to go on forever. Huang Song, office director for leadership team of the National Plan to Reorganize Ancient Book Publication, says that the wide range of choices will be reduced in the future to a small number of quality editions:
It doesn't seem all that likely for something like Red Mansions, when thorny issues of authorship have yet to be resolved. But when they do decide on a standard, authoritative text, maybe the Cao Xueqin museums will finally have settled on a standard image of the author that can go on the cover. Links and Sources
There are currently 1 Comments for Publishing and pulping the ancient classics.
Comments on Publishing and pulping the ancient classicsWhy is it they don't include the Jin Ping Mei in the Four Classics section? Dream of the Red Chamber wasn't one of the original four clsasics. |
Jobs in China
Recent Comments
Jonathan on
Bruce Lee plays ping pong with nunchucks
China at 1 on
International marriage broker sent to prison
Pffefer on
What Robert Scoble learned in China
light487 on
Yellow fever
Danwei.TV
Danwei Model Workers
![]() Recommended blogs and new media
China Media Timeline
Major media events over the last three decades
Books on China
To die poor is a sin: An excerpt of Factory Girls by Leslie T. Chang.
In Wang Shuo's No Man's Land: Geremie Barme addresses Wang Shuo's 千万别把我当人.
Swimming with Mao, a memoir essay: This memoir piece is by Xujun Eberlein, author of the new short story book Apologies Forthcoming'.
Front Page of the Day
A different newspaper every weekday
From the Vault
Classic Danwei posts
+ Lip-Service: Lip-Synching in Chinese Pop Music by David Moser (2005.03): When we showed up at the studio for the taping, we discovered that there was no microphone for our singer, no recording equipment or hookups for our amplifiers, and not even any electrical outlets on the stage. "How are we supposed to do our number?" I asked the studio crew. They looked at us incredulously. "You actually want to sing the song live?" they said + Old fables retold: The Tortoise and the Hare (2006.12): The story of The Tortoise and the Hare (龟兔赛跑) told from a Chinese bureaucratic perspective. + How much money does a Beijing lawyer make? (2005.06): Today's edition of the Legal Mirror (法制晚报) featured a new financial column called 'Checking Your Pockets' (钱包大兜底). The aim of the column is to inform the readers about how much money people in selected industries make in Beijing. To pay respect to its name, Legal Mirror kicked off with lawyers. Here are the results of the report:
Danwei Archives
Danwei Feeds
Via Feedsky
or Feedburner |



