Monday, March 3, 2014
The Author's Life In the Digital Age: Is This the End or Just the Beginning?
There was once a time when starving artists were literally starving. There was no money to be made in the arts and there was very little exposure but creators created anyway because there was something beautiful or honest or thoughtful in them that needed to come out. If the king liked your work, you were lucky enough to perform/paint/write for an audience. If he didn't, you created in obscurity.
As society progressed, performers began collecting wages and gaining notoriety. There was even the possibility for a young person to dream of one day being an artist. One of my favorite stories to read my kids is I Dreamed I Was a Ballerina by Anna Pavlova, a famous Russian ballerina who was born in poverty in St. Petersburg in 1881, who saw her first ballet as a child.
A generation later, Hollywood began making actors famous and it only took one more generation for artists to achieve godlike celebrity and wealth.
The progress was similar for writers. Many of the great works we study and admire today were written by people who died in poverty but thank God they wrote anyway. I often wonder how many brilliant minds went untapped and unnoticed because it was virtually impossible be noticed back then. Writers from the beginning of the 20th century until now have enjoyed unprecedented pay, recognition, fame, and copyright privileges and I'm glad they have. They deserve every bit of it. What a wonderful age we live in when art is appreciated and the creators of it are revered and paid for their work!
This article on The Guardian - From Best Seller to Bust: Is This the End of the Author's Life? reveals a serious lack of perspective. They are scared of the future, of making a living in the digital age. I can understand that. Their way of life is in the process of being turned on its head.
But as an aspiring author myself, one who has never made a dime on anything I've written, I really don't care about the fear of the giant publishing houses after the credit crisis of 07. I don't need the king to approve of my work and offer me a 6-figure deal. If I can scrounge together a few people who enjoy my work and anticipate when the next book/blog is coming, I will be thrilled and feel as if all the time, all the self-doubt, all the toil, will be worth it.
After all, as a writer who happens to also be a Christian, I am nothing. I am a worm that crawls the ground. All of my words, all of my thoughts, no matter how well I string them together, are filthy rags. They are my offering to Him, who created that which I can only try (and fail) to accurately describe in my own art. If someone wants to pay me for them, well I guess that's a bonus but I will not look at the plight of the publishing industry in the digital age with fear. I will consider it a gift that a lowly, obscure worm like me can put my words out in the great big world even though Penguin, Random House, Tyndale, and all the rest have never heard my name.
Labels:
artist,
publishing,
writing
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I'd love to hear your thoughts. Please comment if you feel led and I will do my best to answer it. -R