Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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Across the digital divide.

Let's talk about poverty.

I'll start with the clinical: according to the dictionary (and Wikipedia), poverty is "the state of one who lacks a usual or socially acceptable amount of money or material possessions." So if you don't have as much as everyone around you, you're poor.

I'll move on to the personal. Poverty is the state of waking up freezing in the middle of the night because it's a waste of money to run the heat when everyone is sleeping anyway, and you need that money to buy lunch meat from the "eat it tomorrow or it will kill you" clearance bin. Poverty is the state of making that lunch meat last a week and a half, even after the edges have started turning green. Poverty is sending your little sisters to beg staples off the people in the crap-ass apartments surrounding yours, because everyone is poor, and everyone is hungry, and cute little girls stand a better chance of success than anybody else. That's poverty.

The U.S. Census Bureau said that 43.6 million (14.3%) Americans were living in absolute poverty in 2009. According to the report they released this past Tuesday, the national poverty rate rose to 15.1% in 2010...and we still don't know what 2011 is going to look like.

This is the "official" poverty level, by the way; there are a lot of sociologists who think that the actual poverty level is much higher, since we calculate using a "socially acceptable miniumum standard of living" that was last updated in 1955. To quote Wikipedia again: "The current poverty line only takes goods into account that were common more than 50 years ago, updating their cost using the Consumer Price Index. Mollie Orshansky, who devised the original goods basket and methodology to measure poverty, used by the U.S. government, in 1963-65, updated the goods basket in 2000, finding that the actual poverty threshold, i.e. the point where a person is excluded from the nation's prevailing consumption patterns, is at roughly 170% of the official poverty threshold."

Things that did not exist in 1955: home computers. The internet. Ebook readers.

It is sometimes difficult for me to truly articulate my reaction to people saying that print is dead. I don't want to be labeled a luddite, or anti-ebook; I love my computer, I love my smartphone, and I love the fact that I have the internet in my pocket. The existence of ebooks means that people who can't store physical books can have more to read. It means that hard-to-find and out of print material is becoming accessible again. I means that people who have arthritis, or weak wrists, or other physical disabilities that make reading physical books difficult, can read again, without worrying about physical pain. I love that ebooks exist.

This doesn't change the part where, every time a discussion of ebooks turns, seemingly inevitably, to "Print is dead, traditional publishing is dead, all smart authors should be bailing to the brave new electronic frontier," what I hear, however unintentionally, is "Poor people don't deserve to read."

I don't think this is malicious, and I don't think it's something we're doing on purpose. I just think it's difficult for us, on this side of the digital divide, to remember that there are people standing on the other side of what can seem like an impassable gorge, wondering if they're going to be left behind. Right now, more than 20% of Americans do not have access to the internet. In case that seems like a low number, consider this: That's one person in five. One person in five doesn't have access to the internet. Of those who do have access, many have it via shared computers, or via public places like libraries, which allow public use of their machines. Not all of these people are living below the poverty line; some have voluntarily simplified their lives, and don't see the need to add internet into the mix. But those people are not likely to be the majority.

Now. How many of these people do you think have access to an ebook reader?

I grew up so far below the poverty line that you couldn't see it from my window, no matter how clear the day was. My bedroom was an ocean of books. Almost all of them were acquired second-hand, through used bookstores, garage sales, flea markets, and library booksales, which I viewed as being just this side of Heaven itself. There are still used book dealers in the Bay Area who remember me patiently paying off a tattered paperback a nickel at a time, because that was what I could afford. If books had required having access to a piece of technology—even a "cheap" piece of technology—I would never have been able to get them. That up-front cost would have put them out of my reach forever.

Some people have proposed a free reader program aimed at low-income families, to try to get the technology out there. Unfortunately, this doesn't account for the secondary costs. Can you guarantee reliable internet? Can you find a way to let people afford what will always be, essentially, brand new books, rather that second- or even third-hand books, reduced in price after being worn to the point of nearly falling apart? And can you find a way to completely destroy—I mean, destroy—the resale market for those devices?

Do I sound pessimistic? That's because I am. When I was a kid with nothing, any nice thing I had the audacity to have would be quickly stolen, either by people just as poor as I was, or by richer kids who wanted me to know that I wasn't allowed to put on airs like that. If my books had been virtual, then those people would have been stealing my entire world. They would have been stealing my exit. And I don't think I would have survived.

We need paper books to endure. Every one of us, if we can log onto this site and look at this entry, is a "have" from the perspective of a kid living in an apartment with cockroaches in the walls and junkies in the unit beneath them. A lot of the time, the arguments about the coming ebook revolution forget that the "have nots" also exist, and that we need to take care of them, even if it means we can't force our technological advancement as fast as we might want to. I need to take care of them, because I was a little girl who only grew up to be me through the narrowest of circumstances...and most of those circumstances were words on paper.

Libraries are losing funding by the day. Schools are having their budgets slashed. Poor kids are getting poorer, and if we don't make those books available to them now, they won't know to want them tomorrow.

We cannot forget the digital divide. And we can't—we just can't—be so excited over something new and shiny that we walk away and knowingly leave people on the other side.

We can't.
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My local Borders—like everyone else's—just closed. This is a problem because it was the only bookstore in town, said "town" being a city of over 150,000 people. The nearest bookstore is in the state capitol, 15 miles away.

I've been having trouble explaining my distress to people. "What happens to the high school students who need summer reading?" —Oh, they can get the books from the library. "Really? Two hundred copies of the same book?" —Libraries will do that. Or they can get it on the internet. "What if they don't have internet? Or a means to pay on the internet?" —? —Oh, I'm sure they'll figure out something...

As though we needed to make it that much harder for the kids to get something they need, or even want. I didn't use a bookstore much when I was little (because my parents are rank bibliophiles and we had quite a library), but once I hit my teenage years, a lot of my allowance went towards books. And Amazon has great prices but you miss the discoveries that get you the new authors you picked up on a whim.

Anyway. Print is not dead. Hell, even vinyl isn't dead, and it's far more obsolete than the world of print will ever be.
..."libraries will do that"

Libraries, oddly, only have a budget as big as their local towns/areas of service will allow them to have. Next time a library budget increase comes up for a vote, remind the people who told you this of their statements.

i am huge supporter of libraries, but libraries only offer most of their service for free because they are supported by taxpayers - they are not actually FREE services. It is amazing how often people seem to forget this.

Re: Bookstores

libwitch

5 years ago

Oh, preach. I was overcome and had to lie down upon my fainting couch when I saw yet another article about how print publishing was morally wrong.

Deleted comment

fabricdragon

5 years ago

misslynx

5 years ago

seanan_mcguire

5 years ago

Thank you for this. I try to remind myself how lucky and privileged I am every day, but it never occured to me that the rise of ebooks and the "death" of print publishiing--an issue I've seen discussed many times, with many points of view--had anything to do with poverty and creating access to books for people who have less.

Maybe that's the whole crux of what being "privileged" means--not to even notice what you have, because there's never been a danger of it being taken away. If I want to read a book, I will find it and do just that. Period. I've never not been able to. I will miss my Borders terribly, but there are two B&Ns a bit further away that I can take my business to now.

And of course, libraries. I'm making it a habit now to take stacks of books I've already read to libraries and rummage sales to pass on to someone else.

But with ereaders--I don't have one, I have the Kindle App on my computer, which is a free download as it happens. The books, however, aren't free, and neither was the computer, or the wireless router in the den. It never crossed my mind to wonder about the readership that might be left behind. With ebooks, the arguments I hear are all about what it will do to the publishing business. Never, ever, not once, have I heard about readers who just plain can't afford them. Oh, once in a while I'll meet someone grumbling about how they don't have an ereader "yet," but these are mostly garden-variety bargain hunters, which is a different issue than what you're talking about I think.

So--thank you. I will try to organize my thoughts better and reblog this.
You are very welcome. Thank you for reading.
Evil Rob would like to convert many of our paperbacks to ebooks. His ideal way of doing this (which will happen on a cold day in Hell) would be to trade in the physical copy to the publisher for an e-copy, if they then turned around and gave the physical copy to the underprivileged, such as children's homes.

He actually came up with this idea a few weeks back, when we were looking at the stack of books we were taking home from Worldcon.

Anyway. Who charges the ebook when it needs power and you don't have electricity?
Your Eton hand-cranked emergency radio from NPR?

Deleted comment

seanan_mcguire

5 years ago

thedragonweaver

5 years ago

Wonderful blog that reminds people of what should be obvious to everyone, but isn't. :/
Thank you.
As an LIS student, I have so many Feelings on this topic that I don't even know where to start, but I feel like this pretty neatly sums up a lot of them. Thank you for posting it. ♥
Very welcome.
I also grew up poor in a house full of books. An eReader would have been a disaster for a number of reasons:

No tv meant we all read. I can’t imagine an eReader cheap enough that we would have had three. All of our books were second hand. We used the library constantly.

Physical print requires design, thought, and engineering that eBooks do not. I have Kindle on my phone, and it reflows the type oddly. It makes me less likely to read as thoroughly. It’s more disruptive and harder to loose myself in the story. I also like endpapers, or clever cover design. Print books are tactile, and if, like me, you're an avid reader and also an artist, the tactile matters. Children need to have tactile, designed aspects of their life as much as adults. These are the things that teach us that culture matters.

Also, electronics break. Books, less so.

Poor people need non-disposable culture too.
Yes, exactly.
Thank you for taking the time to explain what "print is dead" means. I grew up on the lower end of middle class, but assuredly not below the poverty line. I don't think it would have ever occurred to me that it would equate as you have articulated. And I think it's crucial, as a first step, to explain the issue; too often I've seen well-meaning sorts skip directly to accusation and yelling. It's not terrifically effective.

What i'm left wondering, is what can be done. I vote for funding for libraries and schools, I donate my functional electronics (not many; they tend to be kinda... melty... when I'm done with them). But what else?
Buy books. Vote for funding. Remember that the divide exists.
Well said. Then again, you are Seanan McGuire and have a way with words.
Aw.

Thank you. :)

serge_lj

5 years ago

seanan_mcguire

5 years ago

serge_lj

5 years ago

serge_lj

5 years ago

seanan_mcguire

5 years ago

serge_lj

5 years ago

Donate either money or books to your local library. Use your local library. Patronize used books stores. I still use both though I spend a small fortune on books. When I was little if it wasn't for the library or used books stores I wouldn't have had anything to read. In fact, I was not allowed to spend my allowance on books. Everyone deserves the right to read.
Agreed.
Well said.

I have noticed that all the ePublishing enthusiasts have one thing in common - they can afford eReaders, and have bought them. I'm not in poverty, but I still can't afford one, or a Tablet, or an iPhone or whatnot.

There's still a culture of the Haves and the Have-Nots when it comes to readers. I'd rather spend my money on paper books rather than save up for an eReader.
Me, too.

Deleted comment

This is a really good point. By committing a huge amount of our culture to electronic media, we risk later generations having no way of accessing any of it if that technology is no longer available. Right now, there are special libraries housing antique books, mediaeval manuscripts, etc... And yes, those things are fragile and could be destroyed in any of a number of ways, but not as easily, it seems to me, as digital media can be made inaccessible by the simple loss of electrical power, or an entire library lost with the click of a delete button.

seanan_mcguire

5 years ago

If e-books are too expensive who is going to pay for the print run of books? We can't force publishers to print books. Books only get printed because they make economic sense.
Books will continue to make economic sense for quite some time. The "geek community" has a higher acceptance rate of new technology than the "non-geek community." I do not know a single large publisher who is considering e-only at this time.

My point was, and remains, that we need to look to the messages of our words. "Print is dead, hooray" is much more loaded than most of us credit it with being.
Amazing how my circles come around.
Just saw a link to this on Twitter. From an account that doesn't follow you (@stokely), retweeted to me by an indie RPG designer/publisher from Baltimore (@fredhicks) who also doesn't follow you.
http://twitter.com/#!/stokely/status/115581895248576512

You certainly do get around, and rightfully so.

(A reply is not expected nor required.)
Wowzers.

palmer_kun

5 years ago

Someone tweeted this over to me this morning and we've already gotten in a big fight about it.

We do NOT, in fact, need paper books to survive. We don't need any kind of books to survive on a most basic level, but only bibliophiles and librarians would insist that the printed page is absolutely required for the enjoyment or absorptions of written work. I would argue that absolutely no one needs fiction to survive, but that seems to be the underpinning of your "argument."

As for the digital divide, yes, eReaders are comparatively costly next to a single book. If you think this "cost reality" is going to persist forever, or even for more than a decade, you obviously don't pay much attention to price patterns in technology. I would be willing to bet that capable ePaper readers will be $20 within 3 years. That's, what, one Harry Potter book at retail?

Free (or stealable) wifi is nearly ubiquitous in semi-urbane areas of the US. Around the country, libraries worth their salt are offering books electronically for e-readers. You don't need to pay for the privilege of electronic reading-- nor, would I argue, should you have to.

I would argue that our country would be much better off providing free Internet service to absolutely everyone than continuing to fund the existing brick-and-mortar library structure. That would pretty much solve the digital divide problem, and would simultaneously allow the creation of what amounted to the best libraries in the world-- in online form.

I'm a musician and I know that digital music and streaming has meant the end of the album. That makes me sad, but I can't do anything about it. I'm also a teacher and I know that within 20 years, people will start to realize that we don't need a university, a commco, even a high school in every nook and cranny of this country, and teachers and professors will start to find themselves out of work en masse. That makes me sad, but I can't do anything about it.

Librarians and bibliophiles can whine and scream all they want about the "stupidity" of the end of print. It's a largely arbitrary format preference, and no amount of screaming about it is going to stop people from going digital once they've had a taste of its convenience. The technology is here, for better or for worse-- and it certainly doesn't have much to do with punishing the poor. Who has the luxury of room for lots of paper books? The cash and gas to find them, order them, transport them? Which is TRULY the proletariat technology? The format without tangible boundaries is the safest to point to as the most "cross-class" in sheer potential.
free, or stealable, wifi? i live n Philadelphia....and you have to UNDERSTAND how to steal wf f you want to do that. i dont.
and how can you afford the hundreds of dollare up front for a computer?

only have a computer now because a kind soul bought me one. otherwse i can use them at college... and how can a poor person get into college?

i got into college and passed all those tests because i read, VORACIOUSLY growing up. i did not grow up poor... but i remember library sales where a box of books was 5 bucks.. a BOX... and rght now at the Goodwll you can buy paperbacks for 25 cents.

how can i buy a e rreader for 25 cents?

lossfound

5 years ago

hanabishirecca

5 years ago

lossfound

5 years ago

seanan_mcguire

5 years ago

lossfound

5 years ago

hanabishirecca

5 years ago

lossfound

5 years ago

amen.

we also must not forget the people whose disabilities make ebooks MORE difficult. i have had e textbooks for two quarters now and i JUST CANT DEAL. i dont understand them, i cant make them work rght, cant FND thngs.. and the only way i could was to PRNT the entire book...
how the heck can most folks do that?
Good point.

elfwreck

5 years ago

You are a g-ddess among us. Thank you for giving this voice.
You are always welcome.
Thank you for this. Friends of mine don't understand why I don't own an eReader and why I cling to actual books. You hit it right on the head!

~*::Meow::*~
I think both formats are good things, but the choice is key.
And this is why I buy extra books for the local library when I have the spare cash. The most recent donation from me? Copies of AAN, LE, and OSS to finish out their Toby set.
And not sucking up or anything, it just happened that I saw they only had RAR and ALH on Friday and got them the rest on Saturday.

seanan_mcguire

5 years ago

As a librarian, I say amen.
So mote it be.
THANK YOU for this post. Every single time I hear "oh print books are obsolete" I just think "Yeah...for .000001% of the world's population." It doesn't even seem to cross peoples' minds that there are places in the world that don't have electricity; that get spotty electricity that goes out whenever there's a huge rainstorm; that don't have broadband unless you can afford to go to an internet cafe or figure out how not get kicked out of the fancy hotel with internet for its guests; that don't have governments who are totally cool with unfettered access to the internet. It's just like...there is an entire WORLD out there outside of this little bubble of the internet.
Very welcome.
Thank you for putting this out there.
It needed saying.
As a teacher who's always struggling to find money to buy books for her classroom because that IS the only way I will ever get my kids (3 year olds) to want to learn how to read, I say Amen. I love my internet and my luxuries and I sometimes want to buy an ebook reader, but every single time, I fear that if I go and do that, I may forget that printed books are a necessity. Thank you so much for writing this. I'm going to go and share it as much as possible.
Very welcome.
You are so right. Especially given the articles I've been reading lately saying that the greatest predictor of future school success is being read to as a child. That requires books. (Given the books covering every surface in our house, we have high hopes for H., but we know we aren't the norm.)

And even being (thankfully) above the poverty line (though I'm not sure whether we're considered middle-class these days), I've been surprised by how many people assume I have a smartphone. Um, no. I'd rather spend that $100+ on food, thanks.
Food is nice.
We are all victims of the Format Wars that have been going on since Edison's time. The simple objects are advancement and conquest, creating a rising tide that will lift all boats. Nobody talks about the folks who can't afford to keep up; they never do. Nobody mentioned the Digital Revolution was a movable feast. Instead, the chefs want to clear the table for the next course before everybody even gets a chance to look at the table, much less get a mouthful of leftovers. Everybody who's busy making money at it wants to move on to the next Big Thing before everybody's gotten used to the last Big Thing.

We who don't have the free currency beyond rent and food and carfare and medical co-pays fall behind and nobody looks back. Whether we want to climb on the bandwagon or not, we just can't. Mr. Cogley from Capt. Kirk's Court Martial episode of Star Trek was right al along; he could call up all the great books of the Earth That Was on that futuristic 5-in. desk terminal but his hotel room was full of books. Think of the excess-baggage charges that little old man must have had to pay!

YET... there are more televisions in North America than there are bathtubs. The second-hand markets and Goodwill® stores offer used DVDs & DVD players. And people sector off pieces of their Welfare checks to pay the cable bill. AND THE RENT IS TOO DAMNED HIGH!

YET people get what they need somehow. They always will. Being broke in 2011 USA isn't quite what being broke was in 1951. It still sucks but all the options remain somehow available. There's just a higher aggravation level now. And there are still people who can't afford even that; this will not change no matter how much we complain about it. I have good friends who are losing apartments. Poor people in New York State can now get free cell phones.

Photography did not kill off painting as the critics feared it would in the 1900s. Just look at the covers of most of today's science-fiction novels. I was never patient enough to paint, so I waited for digital photography, and now I paint with Gimp® software, which I adopted when Photoshop® became unaffordable. I'm broker than some but I still have a decent computer. Hell yeah, the original forms will continue despite the rush through the new. In later times paper books will probably escalate into prestigious specialties like the vinyl pressing of my next downloaded album (I wish).

Real books won't go away, just the definition of what constitutes "real".

Welcome to the 21st century.
Never did I say "real books are going away." What I said, and what I stand by, is that the statement "print is dead" is overly simplistic and ignores social realities, resulting in a bad message, regardless of intent.

Most Americans do not prioritize reading the way they prioritize American Idol. We need books to remain easily available until such time as we can fully saturate the world with ebook readers. It will happen. I have faith. But it will take time.
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