publishing Archives | Research & Innovation /research/tag/publishing/ Wed, 29 Jan 2025 19:56:15 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 From prof to publisher of award-winning public policy book /research/2012/05/11/from-prof-to-publisher-of-award-winning-public-policy-book-2/ Fri, 11 May 2012 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2012/05/11/from-prof-to-publisher-of-award-winning-public-policy-book-2/ Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Paul Emond wears many hats, but it’s his publishing business that has grabbed the limelight recently. On May 1, it was announced that Democratizing the Constitution: Reforming Responsible Government by Peter Aucoin, Mark Jarvis and Lori Turnbull, and published by Emond Montgomery Publications, had won the $50,000 Donner Prize for […]

The post From prof to publisher of award-winning public policy book appeared first on Research & Innovation.

]]>

Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Paul Emond wears many hats, but it’s his publishing business that has grabbed the limelight recently.

On May 1, it was announced that by Peter Aucoin, Mark Jarvis and Lori Turnbull, and published by Emond Montgomery Publications, had won the $50,000 for the best public policy book in 2011by a Canadian.

Paul Emond

Emond, who is the director of Osgoode’s Professional Master of Lawsin Alternative Dispute Resolution Program, founded Emond Montgomery Publications Limited in 1978 with Ann Montgomery and developed it into one of Canada’s top academic publishers.

What started with Emond’s idea to build better teaching materials for Canadian law students, “led to a company that has not only become a leading a voice in Canadian academic and school publishing, but a strong voice in stimulating public policy debate in Canada,”he said in an e-mail message.

The winner of the Donner Prize was chosen from an impressive list of 58 submissions and a shortlist of four by the distinguished five-member jury comprised of: A. Anne McLellan, former MP and distinguished scholar in residence to the at the Institute for United States Policy Studies(Jury Chair); Wendy Dobson, professor at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto and director of the Institute for International Business; KevinLynch, Canadian economist and former clerk of the Privy Council and secretary to the Cabinet, who is now chair of BMO Financial Group; Marcel Boyer, Bell Canada Professor of industrial economics at the Universityof Montreal;and Denis Stairs, professor emeritus in political science and a Faculty Fellow of the Centre of Foreign Policy Studies at Dalhousie University.

The Donner Prize jury described Democratizing the Constitution as "an important and timely book -- one that calls into question the legitimacy of our most fundamental institutions of democracy." Aucoin, whodied last July, was professor emeritus of political science and public administration at Dalhousie University.MarkJarvisis a doctoral candidate at the University of Victoria, and Lori Turnbullis an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at Dalhousie University.

The Donner Prize, established in 1998, annually rewards excellence and innovation in Canadian public policy thinking, writing and research in Canada. In bestowing this award, the Donner Canadian Foundation seeks to broaden policy debates, increase general awareness of the importance of policy decision making and make an original and meaningful contribution to policy discourse.

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

The post From prof to publisher of award-winning public policy book appeared first on Research & Innovation.

]]>
Bruce Jay Friedman plays published by 91ɫ students /research/2012/02/24/bruce-jay-friedman-plays-published-by-york-students-2/ Fri, 24 Feb 2012 10:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2012/02/24/bruce-jay-friedman-plays-published-by-york-students-2/ Oscar-nominated screenwriter and accomplished American playwright Bruce Jay Friedman has a new collection of selected works coming out, and it’s being published by 91ɫ’s Leaping Lion Books, which is run by students in the Professional Writing Program. The launch of 3.1 Plays will take place Thursday, March 1, from noon to 3pm, at the […]

The post Bruce Jay Friedman plays published by 91ɫ students appeared first on Research & Innovation.

]]>

Oscar-nominated screenwriter and accomplished American playwright Bruce Jay Friedman has a new collection of selected works coming out, and it’s being published by 91ɫ’s Leaping Lion Books, which is run by students in the Professional Writing Program.

The launch of 3.1 Plays will take place Thursday, March 1, from noon to 3pm, at the Eleanor Winters Art Gallery, 129 Winters College, Keele campus. Friedman won’t be in attendance, but there will be a video message from him specially created for the occasion and 91ɫ theatre students will perform excerpts from his book.

“Publishing an accomplished writer like Bruce Jay Friedman raises the profile of Leaping Lion Books,” says Alan Borenstein, Leaping Lion Books publisher and fourth-year professional writing student. “We’ve proven that we can work with any calibre of author, and put out a product worthy of your bookshelf.”

峾’s four works in 3.1 Plays are known for their sharp, black comedy and a punch of wit, and include the Obie award-winning play Scuba Duba: A Tense Comedy and Steambath. Both were off-Broadway hits. The other two plays in the collection are Sardines and The Trial. The plays are billed as capturing the surreal with a flair that is uncompromised by 峾’s ability to write real and flawed characters. His plays have delighted audiences since the 1960s and earned him rave reviews from The New 91ɫ Times and The New 91ɫer.

In addition to playwriting, Friedman has published six collections of stories, several novels, as well as a nonfiction collection. His novels include Stern (1962), A Mother’s Kisses (1964), The Dick (1970), The Current Climate (1989) and Violencia! (2002). A couple of his stories were also adapted for film – The Heartbreak Kid and The Lonely Guy.

Fourth-year students in the book stream of the Professional Writing Program of the Department of English, Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, are required to take the Book Publishing Practicum course and participate in the publication of a real manuscript, such as 峾’s 3.1 Plays.

Bruce Jay Friedman

Just how the opportunity to publish 峾’s work came about was serendipitous. “When I was an editor at the University of Chicago Press, I published a collection of Bruce 峾’s essays titled Even the Rhinos Were Nymphos. We had been talking about another book, a collection of his plays, when I left Chicago in 2001,” says 91ɫ English Professor Geoffrey Huck. “When a few years ago I put together Leaping Lion Books for the Book Publishing Practicum at 91ɫ, I resurrected the idea with him, and he graciously agreed to let us publish.”

Friedman sent several plays and Huck chose four. “I wish we could have included more in the collection, but length – and hence cost – were considerations,” he says. “The students, along with course director Mike O’Connor, have done the rest. I hope other readers will find these plays as delightful as I have found them to be.”

Borenstein says the experience the publishing practicum provides is invaluable. “As jobs have become scarce for graduates in all fields, students are eager for a hands-on education and applicable skills. 91ɫ’s publishing program simulates a professional working environment, in a program unique to Canada. With changes in how we read and receive information, the publishing industry is asking itself a lot of questions. We are the group of individuals who will provide the answers. That’s exciting.”

Having the opportunity to published 峾’s book means a lot, says Huck. “What I think Bruce’s and our other books prove is that the students in the Book Publishing Practicum are highly competent publishers. They are the future of book publishing, and they’re already showing their stripes.”

Everyone is invited to attend the launch. Refreshments will be provided and copies of the book will be available. There will also be a raffle courtesy of Leaping Lion Books sponsors for a chance to win gift certificates to the 91ɫ Bookstore, gift certificates and merchandise from the Hard Rock Café, sunglasses from Anders & Flynt, tickets from Stage West Mississauga and a makeover from Kliks Beauty Centre. Sponsors also include the 91ɫ Writing Department, Z-teca Gourmet Burritos, Blueberry Hill, ASRock America Inc. and NZXT Crafted Gaming Armor.

峾’s 3.1 Plays is available in print and in e-book format through Kobo Inc.

For more information about Leaping Lion Books, 3.1 Plays or Friedman, visit the Leaping Lion Books ɱٱ.

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

The post Bruce Jay Friedman plays published by 91ɫ students appeared first on Research & Innovation.

]]>
Professor Caitlin Fisher speaks to Globe and Mail about how digital technology is changing the way writers tell stories /research/2011/07/12/professor-caitlin-fisher-speaks-to-globe-and-mail-about-how-digital-technology-is-changing-the-way-writers-tell-stories-2/ Tue, 12 Jul 2011 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2011/07/12/professor-caitlin-fisher-speaks-to-globe-and-mail-about-how-digital-technology-is-changing-the-way-writers-tell-stories-2/ The e-book is changing the publishing business, but will digital technology actually change the way we tell stories, the way writers write – for better or for worse? asked The Globe and Mail July 9. Multimedia experiments often use short texts because readers seem unlikely to tolerate long passages of type in a video or […]

The post Professor Caitlin Fisher speaks to Globe and Mail about how digital technology is changing the way writers tell stories appeared first on Research & Innovation.

]]>
The e-book is changing the publishing business, but will digital technology actually change the way we tell stories, the way writers write – for better or for worse? asked The Globe and Mail July 9.

Multimedia experiments often use short texts because readers seem unlikely to tolerate long passages of type in a video or interactive environment. "Maybe the chunk is not the chapter; maybe the chunk is the paragraph, and one paragraph can lead to more, different paragraphs," says Caitlin Fisher, Canada Research Chair in Digital Culture at 91ɫ [Faculty of Fine Arts], who used that approach in her 2001 multimedia novella These Waves of Girls. "People have been figuring out how to get their message onto a single screen. It makes some writing better and some writing worse."

91ɫ's Fisher agrees that the issue is how to draw the reader through the text. "It's interesting to say maybe people would navigate your novel like a game environment," she says. "People find a game environment compelling. [But] does it always have to be a puzzle or maze? Could great writing draw you through it?... We don't have serious writers experimenting with it."

Fisher also notes how seductive video is, hoping books will not simply be replaced by some version of interactive film or augmented reality. "We have this push that all literature can become movies. Everyone can cheaply make and edit moving pictures. It is pushing out interesting experiments in writing."

"I'd be happy to purchase an $80 electronic novel that promised to take me places I hadn't been before, but it's a hard sell," says Fisher, who wants to see writers making technology work for them rather than technology shaping the form. "It is crucial writers be there asking what kind of tools might be useful...and not just accept what computer science hands them."

Posted by Arielle Zomer, research communications officer,with filescourtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

The post Professor Caitlin Fisher speaks to Globe and Mail about how digital technology is changing the way writers tell stories appeared first on Research & Innovation.

]]>