The Japan Writers Conference is this weekend, October 17 and 18, in Kyoto. Here's what I'll be talking about at 3:00 on Saturday:
Summary: In this presentation David will explore the following questions: What does the withering away of print media mean for aspiring and established critics? Is the Internet friend or foe? How can aspiring critics get started, and what, once started, must critics do to be good? Can a critic make money?
Abstract: Newspapers and magazines have long been the primary venues for non-academic writing about the arts. Now, in Japan as elsewhere, these venues are withering, if not dying altogether. In the coming years there will, it is clear, be fewer print venues, and fewer paying venues, open to writers who persist in believing that books and art are worthy of close and careful consideration. What, then, are critics, aspiring and established, to do? In this presentation I hope to discuss how one gets started as a critic, and what one must do to be a good one. I also intend to explore the fact that lion’s share of criticism—from the dreadful to the sublime— is now published on-line and what that means for working writers. Finally, I would like to consider the importance of being paid for one’s work, and the unlikelihood that, as a critic, one will be.
There will be lots of other interesting things going on, too. Here's a list of what's on offer.
—David
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