Canelo / Arts Council England
Canelo / Arts Council England |
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Literature in the 21st Century report
Canelo / Arts Council England |
43 Literature in the 21st Century: Understanding Models of Support for Literary Fiction around the world and English literary fiction stands out in this regard. Many writers will earn significant sums for these deals. There is no sign that the demand for English language fiction is slowing down. Coupled with booming export sales (built on the spread of reading level English, the competitive price of English books and premium demand for English language content) this puts British writers in a good position vis a vis their colleagues writing in other languages. The Dutch or Chinese writer of literary fiction will find securing a major translation deal even harder than their English counterpart – although English writers may be successful, it’s by no means easy. Nonetheless several editors and agents told us confidentially that many of their literary authors were earning more from foreign rights than English language sales. If you include rights sales and export sales UK publishing exported £2.6bn in 2016, comprising 54% of their total revenues 25 – up from £806m in 2009 26 . However, Europe accounts for 35% of that total: the biggest single region of exports. While the impact of Brexit on the publishing market is as yet unknown, new tariff barriers, logistical complications, intellectual property issues or business constraints would have a chilling impact on that total. Export markets such as the Netherlands, Germany or Sweden, strong book markets where English is widely spoken, are a vital component of both foreign rights and export sales. A further challenge looms with regards to US publishers. Simon & Schuster CEO Carolyn Reidy, for example, has already stated that British publishers’ exclusivity on European distribution rights, a common feature in many contracts, is untenable post-Brexit. This will add further pressure onto the British literary ecosystem in a key redoubt. Many publishers are on the record as voicing their fears about Brexit, up to and including the boss of Bertelsmann, the €18bn content industries giant and corporate parent of Penguin Random House, who claimed the UK’s position as its Intellectual property hub was under threat. 27 Then there is a potential domestic impact. If the economy sharply nosedived this would have a knock-on effect on publishers and authors. The pound has already fallen and this means the costs of imports such as paper, and the cost of importing books printed abroad, has risen. While the latter point mainly applies to children’s and illustrated publishing, it puts more pressure on the system as a whole. Furthermore, there are the intangible aspects of Brexit. Almost everyone we spoke to voiced fears that the place of UK writing was threatened; that foreign publishers would be in some way less willing to work with authors and publishers, the public less willing to read English language books. While it is too early to say for sure, there will be some impact, and this could hit one of the few unmitigated success stories of recent years. 25 https://www.publishers.org.uk/media-centre/news-releases/2017/uk-publishing-has-record-year-up-7-to-48bn/ 26 http://www.thecreativeindustries.co.uk/industries/publishing/publishing-facts-and-figures 27 https://www.thebookseller.com/blogs/goodbye-all-518251 |
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