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On any given day, millions of people will read e-books. Yet many of us will do so while holding them apart from 'real books'. The fact that a book can be worthy – of our time, money, respect, even love – without being 'real' is a fascinating paradox of twenty-first century reading. Drawing on original data from a longitudinal study, Laura Dietz investigates how movement between conceptions of e-books as ersatz, digital proxy, and incomplete books serves readers in unexpected ways. The cultural value of e-books remains an area of intense debate in publishing studies. Exploring the legitimacy of e-books in terms of their 'realness' and 'bookness', Dietz enriches our understanding of what e-books are, while also opening up new ways of thinking about how we imagine, how we use, and what we want from books of every kind. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
This chapter examines the production, circulation, and reception of books in the digital landscape, comprising a complicated entanglement between bricks-and-mortar bookstores and digital technologies that transforms every aspect of the way books are produced, published, distributed, and experienced. The history of the relationship between bookselling, reading devices, publishing and printing platforms, and the shape of the literary marketplace in the digital age reveals elements of the publishing circuit that are examined along with the increasing platformization of cultural production. The digital literary sphere affects authorship and the remuneration authors receive; the increased conflation between publishing and bookselling; the tension between e-books and print, and online versus bricks-and-mortar stores; and the relationship between fan fiction and literary consumption. The literary marketplace in the digital age is one marked by flux, but also the rise of new forms of access and new meaning for books and literature in the digital age.
Chapter 16: Reading in Digital Contexts. Digital reading has now become a major form of information communication worldwide. However, discussions around digital reading, specifically in educational contexts, generate many complexities that need to be unpacked. One form of digital reading (and digital texts) involves texts that are essentially equivalent to print texts, but in a digital medium (e.g., e-books, digital journal articles, and emails). Digital reading also refers to online texts on internet browsers and various apps that involve dynamic “online texts.” Research indicates that reading fixed print texts, versus fixed digital texts, leads to better comprehension and better learning, especially with longer texts. At the same time, important distinctions are reported between reading-comprehension skills when reading “frozen” texts and when reading hyperlinked online texts. Reading online texts, while a modern requirement for information seeking, creates many unique difficulties for reading development. Research on these challenges and efforts to provide effective reading instruction with online texts is addressed. The chapter concludes with implications for instruction.
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