Millicent Weber Millicent Weber i(10904303 works by)
Gender: Female
Heritage: German
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Works By

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1 ‘You’re Too Smart to Be a Publicist’ : Perceptions, Expectations and the Labour of Book Publicity Alexandra Dane , Millicent Weber , Claire Parnell , 2024 single work criticism
— Appears in: Media Culture and Society , January vol. 46 no. 1 2024; (p. 94–111)

'The representation of publicists in popular culture appears to have a direct relationship with how publishing sector publicity staff are perceived by their colleagues and peers, having a distinct knock-on effect to work practices and labour conditions. In this article, we explore these perceptions and, through interviews with eight publicists working in publishing houses in Australia, explore how the work of publicity is commonly misrecognised and undervalued. In framing publicists as cultural intermediaries who contribute to the shaping of cultural tastes, we further illuminate the significant gap between the common gendered perceptions of publicists and the realities of their professional practice.' (Publication abstract)

1 Book Publicists and the Labour of Cultural Intermediation Millicent Weber , Claire Parnell , Alexandra Dane , 2023 single work criticism
— Appears in: Continuum : Journal of Media and Cultural Studies , vol. 37 no. 3 2023; (p. 365-380)

'Book publicists are important intermediaries in generating earned media attention, creating discoverability opportunities, and getting new books into the hands of potential readers. Despite their important function in book culture, publicists’ labour in producing and framing value in the book industry is often rendered invisible in the industry and scholarly literature, which we trace back to field-defining conceptual models, particularly Robert Darnton’s Communications Circuit (1982). This article draws on interviews with eight Australian publicists to make visible, interrogate, and explain the material and symbolic labour involved in the affective relationship-building and cultural framing work of publicity. This article explores publicists’ day-to-day work, their relationships with authors, colleagues and the media, and publicity’s function in contemporary book culture. Book publicists are important cultural intermediaries: they are integral to the economic and social contexts of publishing, and influence and shape cultural tastes and value through strategic promotional work, resulting in considerable effects across the domains of production and reception.' (Publication summary)

1 Authors Are Resisting AI with Petitions and Lawsuits. But They Have an Advantage : We Read to Form Relationships with Writers Millicent Weber , 2023 single work column
— Appears in: The Conversation , 26 July 2023;

'The first waves of AI-generated text have writers and publishers reeling.' 

1 1 y separately published work icon Post-Digital Book Cultures : Australian Perspectives Alexandra Dane (editor), Millicent Weber (editor), Clayton : Monash University Publishing , 2021 28130350 2021 anthology criticism

'The post-digital publishing paradigm offers authors, readers, publishers and scholars the opportunity to engage with the production and circulation of the book (in all its forms) beyond the conventional boundaries and binaries of the pre-digital and digital eras.

'Post-Digital Book Cultures: Australian Perspectives is a collection of scholarly writing that examines these opportunities, from a range of disciplinary and methodological approaches, with the aim of engaging with the questions that define post-digital book cultures beyond the role of e-books. Examinations of digital publishing in the literary field can often be characterised as either narratives of decline or narratives of revolution. As we move into the third decade of the twenty-first century, what has become clear is that neither of these approaches accurately encapsulate the role of ‘the digital’ on contemporary publishing practice. Rather than upending book publishing culture, the emergence of digital technologies and platforms in the field has complicated and recontextualised the production, circulation and consumption of books.

'This collection of essays brings together contributions from scholars and industry practitioners to consider the changing nature of the production of the book and the circulation of book culture within a post-digital context and platform enclosures.'  (Publication summary)

1 Author Care and the Invisibility of Affective Labour: Publicists’ Role in Book Publishing Claire Parnell , Alexandra Dane , Millicent Weber , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: Publishing Research Quarterly , December vol. 36 no. 4 2020; (p. 648–659)

'Publicists perform an important but ill-understood role within the publishing industry. Surveys of the Australian and UK publishing industries reveal those working in marketing and publicity are at higher risk of sexual harassment (Books + Publishing in Over half of book-industry survey respondents report sexual harassment, Books + Publishing, 2017; The Bookseller in Sexual harassment reported by over half in trade survey, The Bookseller, 2017). There is little clarity about the role of the publicist or why they are at greater risk of workplace harassment. In this article, we synthesise existing scholarly and industry understandings of the publicist role and the labour they perform. This examination of the literature reveals an absence of critical engagement with publicists’ work. We explore the affective labour that constitutes their roles and argue that the work they do conferring visibility and prestige onto authors and publishers is a major contributing factor in rendering their role invisible in the industry. A better understanding of publicists’ role in book publishing is vital, but first this research aims to make the publicist visible.'  (Publication abstract)

1 Feminism in the Troll Space : Clementine Ford’s Fight like a Girl, Social Media, and the Networked Book Millicent Weber , Mark Davis , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: Feminist Media Studies , November vol. 20 no. 7 2020; (p. 944–965)
'Clementine Ford’s memoir/manifesto hybrid, Fight Like a Girl, was hailed as a significant contribution to feminist debate in Australia when it was published by Allen & Unwin in 2016. The book is one stage in Ford’s considerable media career, developed across traditional journalism, public speaking, and social media. It can be situated in the context of a recent Anglophone publishing trend of similar hybrids between feminist manifesto and memoir, as well as—as evidenced by its cover quote from Anne Summers—being part of a much longer history of Australian feminist publishing. This article positions Fight Like a Girl as a networked text, exploring its close and constitutive relationship to Ford’s social media presence and its online reception. Both book and reception tap into online feminist conversations and mainstream public debates about feminism in the wake of identity politics, trolling and shaming, and the gendered nature of contemporary online spaces. Analysing conversations on Facebook and Twitter and reviews across Goodreads and more traditional media outlets, this article explores the extent to which the book reconfigures, intensifies or enters into existing conversations as it moves through the networked space of post-digital Australian literature.' (Publication abstract)
1 The Conventions and Regulation of Book Culture Millicent Weber , Alexandra Dane , 2020 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Humanities Review , May no. 66 2020;
'Government policy has long shaped the production, circulation and consumption of literary texts in Australia. Copyright legislation, importation regulations and the public funding of authors, events and prizes are integral parts of the fabric of Australian publishing, influencing author careers, book production, bookselling and national literary tastes. In his articulation of contemporary cultural policy, David Throsby (Economics 26; ‘Commerce’) observes the ways in which government support for arts and culture, through public funding and legislative regulation, is motivated by a desire for growth within the cultural sectors. The publishing industry, structured as it is by both cultural and commercial imperatives, shares common goals with cultural policy, leading to the development of a mutually beneficial and often commercially generative relationship between the two. The production of books in Australia exists within a policy framework that, often through regulatory mechanisms, is economically supportive. The result of this framework has profound radiating effects (Australian Society of Authors; Donoughue; Glover; Shapcott). Authors, who are supported financially to produce literary texts; literary events, that celebrate authors and the public life of literature; publications and small publishers, that curate and disseminate literary works; and structures of bookselling in Australia: each of these individuals and institutions operates explicitly within a system of policy decisions.' (Paragraph two)
1 On Audiobooks and Literature in the Post-digital Age Millicent Weber , 2019 single work essay
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , October 2019;

'Audible Australia’s 2019 advertising campaign combined political satire with a quintessentially Australian brand of self-mocking. It used this lens to poke fun at Australian speakers and Australian slang – public figures like Magda Szubanski, and popular (and popularly derided) vernaculars. Think ‘yeah, nah, nah, yeah’. In broad terms, Audible’s ad promotes how audiobooks fit neatly around the edges of a busy life, while still upholding the intellectual superiority of books over other forms of cultural leisure.' (Introduction)

1 1 y separately published work icon Book Publishing in Australia : A Living Legacy Millicent Weber (editor), Aaron Mannion (editor), Clayton : Monash University Publishing , 2019 16977442 2019 anthology criticism

'Publishing is an industry steeped in rules and conventions, controlled by laws and contractual agreements, and heavily invested in practices of careful production and reproduction. But it is also currently undergoing drastic change. Digital technologies have reshaped the practices of writing, editing, typesetting, printing, distributing and buying books. And as political movements like #metoo ripple through the creative industries, the social implications of legacy processes of cultural production and valuation are being re-evaluated.

'This collection of essays draws together contributions from established and emerging scholars and industry practitioners to explore contemporary Australian publishing’s relationship to the past. How does knowledge transfer occur within and between presses? How do gender and race shape participation in the industry? And how can scholars, librarians, and publishers work together to improve and future-proof the industry?'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 Metadata as a Machine for Feeling in Germaine Greer’s Archive Millicent Weber , Rachel Buchanan , 2019 single work criticism
— Appears in: Archives and Manuscripts , vol. 47 no. 2 2019; (p. 230-241)

'What happens when a human coder meets a machine one? This article explores this question with reference to the archive of Professor Germaine Greer: Australian-born feminist, performer, scholar, and professional controversialist. It does so by staging two very different data encounters with the 70,000-word finding aid for the print journalism series, a key component of Greer’s archive. The first encounter is archivist’s creation of the finding aid; the second, archivist and literary scholar’s interpretation of this archival metadata using sentiment analysis. Interrogating these activities side-by-side opens up a productive middle ground between humanities scholars and computer technicians, between historians and archivists, between the hand made and the machine made.'  (Publication abstract)

1 4 y separately published work icon Literary Festivals and Contemporary Book Culture Millicent Weber , Cham : Palgrave Macmillan , 2018 19775195 2018 multi chapter work criticism

'There has been a proliferation of literary festivals in recent decades, with more than 450 held annually in the UK and Australia alone. These festivals operate as tastemakers shaping cultural consumption; as educational and policy projects; as instantiations, representations, and celebrations of literary communities; and as cultural products in their own right. As such they strongly influence how literary culture is produced, circulates and is experienced by readers in the twenty-first century. This book explores how audiences engage with literary festivals, and analyses these festivals' relationship to local and digital literary communities, to the creative industries focus of contemporary cultural policy, and to the broader literary field. The relationship between literary festivals and these configuring forces is illustrated with in-depth case studies of the Edinburgh International Book Festival, the Port Eliot Festival, the Melbourne Writers Festival, the Emerging Writers' Festival, and the Clunes Booktown Festival. Building on interviews with audiences and staff, contextualised by a large-scale online survey of literary festival audiences from around the world, this book investigates these festivals' social, cultural, commercial, and political operation. In doing so, this book critically orients scholarly investigation of literary festivals with respect to the complex and contested terrain of contemporary book culture.' (Publication summary)

1 At the Intersection of Writers Festivals and Literary Communities Millicent Weber , 2017 single work essay
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , September 2017;

'Literary festivals are complex beasts. They’re simultaneously social spaces, cultural projects and political platforms. As providers of entertainment, drivers of tourist revenue and exercises in government branding – think ‘Melbourne: City of Literature’ – they cop flak for their commercialisation.' (Introduction)

1 Conceptualizing Audience Experience at the Literary Festival Millicent Weber , 2015 single work criticism
— Appears in: Continuum : Journal of Media & Cultural Studies , vol. 29 no. 1 2015; (p. 84-96)
'The literary festival has been variously claimed to perform communicative, educative and social functions: it engages the public in literary and political discussions, thereby encouraging participation in ‘the Arts’ and promoting associated civic benefits. The audience of the literary festival, however, is typically represented as a body of populist and popularizing consumers, uncritically engaging with the mass-culture produced and propagated in the festival setting. Researchers have begun to refute such claims, demonstrating that members of festival audiences exhibit a deep and critical engagement with literature; but beyond this demographic-based research, little work has been conducted capable of interrogating audience experience, or mapping the broader culture of festival attendance. The diversity of literary festivals' sizes, locations, histories and stated goals is complemented by the equally broad ranges of programmed events. These events – and the festivals more broadly – are at once literary, theatrical, political and contemporary. As such, conceptions of audience, reader and readership from book history, communication and media studies, and performance and theatre studies, can all contribute to an investigation of the experience of the literary festival audience. This research compares work from these areas of study with individuals' personal accounts of festival experiences extracted from online weblogs to begin to conceptualise the variety and complexity of audience experiences at the literary festival, and outline the rich potential for further study in this area.' (Publication abstract)
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