Difference between revisions 332230411 and 335855432 on enwiki{{Unreferenced|date=December 2009}} {{Orphan|date=December 2009}} '''Ghost Publishing''' is an anonymous publishing movement. The basic philosophy of the movement is in part derivative of the [[new criticism]] of the early part of the twentieth century. The new criticism held that a work should be treated as though it were contemporary and anonymous whether it was a text by [[Tacitus]] or [[Ernest Hemingway|Hemingway]]. The Ghost Publishers take the belief one step further and(contracted; show full) There are antecedents to the Ghost Publishing including the American [[minicomic]] movement of the 1970s and 1980s, the Soviet underground publishing phenomena [[Samizdat]], and the hand to hand distribution of many [[Beat generation|Beat]] manuscripts of the 1940s and 1950s many of which were circulated in typescript for more than ten years before eventually being published. The collections of various [[amateur press associations]] of the United States may serve in some respects as a model for the physical primitivism of the typical ghost published text. The central mainstream literary idol of the movement not surprisingly is [[Jorge Luis Borges]] whose [[Ficciones]] serve as a model for many of these anonymous writers. The movement is sometimes referred to by the term [[Guerilla Publishing]] which has been co-opted by more overground efforts to publicize small press and independent publications but the anonymous writers’ movement should not be confused with these efforts at viral marketing. {{DEFAULTSORT:Ghost Publishing}} [[Category:Publishing terms]] All content in the above text box is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license Version 4 and was originally sourced from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=335855432.
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