Difference between revisions 75393708 and 92705215 on enwiki{{linkless|September 2006}} {{cleanup-date|May 2006}} '''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 [[Hemingway]]. The Ghost Publishers take the belief one step further and hold that works of liter(contracted; show full) There are antecedents to the Ghost Publishing including the American [[minicomic]] movement of the 1970’s and 1980’s, the Soviet underground publishing phenomena [[Samizdat]], and the hand to hand distribution of many [[Beat generation|Beat]] manuscripts of the 1940’s and 1950’s 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. 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=92705215.
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