The Writers' Union of Canada to Vote On Accepting Self-Published Authors as Members
Self publishing has long been accepted by readers, writers, and even (parts of) the publishing as legitimate and mainstream, but some author’s groups are still excluding even successful self-published authors from their membership roles.
But that could soon change. The CBC reported a few days ago that The Writers' Union of Canada is expected to vote next month on whether to accept self-published authors as members. If the measure passes, TWUC will join The Author’s Guild in accepting self-published authors as members.
For the past year, an ad hoc membership committee has been gathering feedback from chapters across the country on whether the organization should revoke its long-standing policy of not admitting self-published authors. Members will vote on the issue at TWUC’s AGM in Ottawa at the end of May.
The Writers' Union of Canada has over 1,900 members, and opinions are divided on the topic. Some members such as Armin Wiebe, author of Tatsea, have noted that being an independent creator doesn’t carry the same stigma in other industries. "In other areas of the arts it is not considered unseemly to produce your own music recordings, mount productions of your own play, or to rent a gallery space to hang your own art show," Wiebe is quoted in the CBC article.
Wiebe goes on to add that his issue isn’t with whether authors is independent but with the quality of their work. "I have no objection to self-published authors joining TWUC as such… My problem with most of the self-published books I have read or tried to read is a serious lack of editing, both substantive and copy editing. Those are services that a good publisher will invest money in, so if you self-publish you should invest in it too."
He does have a point there, but I’m not sure it is a strong one. Remember, Twilight, Snooki’s autobiography, and Ann Rice were all published by legacy publishing houses. Also, a brief glance through a photo blog like Good Show Sir will convince you that legacy =\= quality.
And Wiebe isn’t the only member to still have doubts. Bob Armstrong, author of Dadolescence, has yet to make up his mind. "There are a number of ideas in play here," Armstrong said. "One is that self-publishing is moving beyond the traditional vanity-press status for some writers. But at the same time, TWUC wants to remain the voice of the professional writer… If we don’t expand our membership, do we miss out on the opportunity to bring in new, often younger, writers who work within a different literary culture?"
It’s not clear yet which way the vote will go, but the fact that this change is being considered at all is a significant development – for Canada, at least.
This story isn’t the earth-shattering kaboom it first appears because TWUC won' bet the first to accept self-pubbed members.
The Author’s Guild voted in April 2012 to accept self-published authors as members. According to the AG website, general membership in The Author’s Guild is open to self-published authors who have earned $5,000 or more in the past 18 months. I do not know how many self-published authors have joined the AG but apparently the option exists.
P.S. If someone could leave a comment and verify whether The AG is actually accepting self-published authors as members, I would deeply appreciate it. All I have at the moment are the claims on the website.
P.P.S. I was surprised when I was reminded that the AG accepts self-published members, but even more surprised to learn that the SFWA does not yet do so.
Comments
Geri May 13, 2013 um 2:13 pm
I love the comment about Snookie’s books, etc! We all know that many publishers are after books that sell and not necessarily books that are good. The reverse is also true- just because a books is self-published doesn’t mean it isn’t good. Here is the obvious dilemma- since self-publishing can’t be policed, far too many bad books are put out there. In fact we are finding that only about 10% are worth a readers time and money but those books are good! As more successful author’s turn to self-publishing these author groups and guilds will need to move with the times or they will become obsolete. You may end up with honored members who win the big prizes (Hillary Mantel ?) that the literary snobs deem worthy but readers find boring. The need to only publish books that will have a monetary return – which few can really predict- has driven many really good authors to self-publish. At indieBRAG we are busy finding those books and helping them to rise to the top of this avanlance of self-published books!
The Rodent May 13, 2013 um 4:03 pm
> we are finding that only about 10% are worth a readers time and money
As always, right…? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sturgeon%27s_Law
The thing self-pub lacks is a publisher committed to quality. But as we know, most publishers aren’t even committed to quality, so… Is this a surprise?
See the interesting chat out on Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1320432-quality-control-for-indie-authors-is-there-a-way about quality control for Indie authors…
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