There has always been a thriving industry of vanity
publishing. Vantage Press was a well-known vanity publisher which even
advertised in places like The New York Times Book Review. While you had to pay to be published
(instead of the reverse of normal commercial publishing where authors
get paid for their work), you would be able to satisfy your ego and see your
name in lights. Vanity publishing really was for the vain and particularly
those who didn’t like to take no for an answer. Now the vanity idea has caught on in the
rarefied world of academic and scholarly publishing. A recent article in the
Times, “Scientific Articles Accepted (Personal Checks, Too), NYT, 4/7/13) is
causing an uproar among academics and scientists who place great importance in
peer reviewed journals. The Times quoted Steven Goodman, “a dean and professor
of medicine at Stanford and the editor of the journal Clinical Trials,” as
describing the phenomenon as “the dark side of open access.” Often times these
open access journals or conferences are a con. “The scientists who were recruited
to appear at a conference called Entomology-2013 thought they had been selected
to make a presentation to the leading professional association who study
insects, “ the Times reported, “But they found out the hard way they were wrong. The prestigious academically sanctioned
conference they had in mind has a slightly different name: Entomology 2013
(without the hypen)." As may be obvious the possibilities are vast. Instead of The New England Journal of Medicine, you simply create The Southern New England
Journal of Medicine. Instead of Nature you have NaTURE. Back in l996, there
was a famous scandal in which a writer for a scholarly magazine called Lingua
Franca perpetrated a hoax on the left leaning Social Text. The article, which
parodied deconstructionist jargon laden prose, was a accepted
by Social Text. The new value free form of vanity scholarly
publishing is a deconstructionist utopia. In a universe where everything is
relative, there is no right or wrong and all thinking is merely a product of
its social context, there is no need for peer review. Let’s say you write
a piece entitled “Adultery in the German Diet.” The auspicious and highly
respected journal Foreign Affairs is mostly likely to turn it down, no matter
how scholarly the research, but you’ll have no reason to despair that your hard work won’t be rewarded. For a price you can simply have your article published in
Foreign-Affairs.
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