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  • Afterall Books (Hg.)

    From Conceptualism to Feminism: Lucy Lippard's Numbers…

  • Claire Bishop

    Artificial Hells. Participatory Art and the Politics of…

  • Delft University of Technology (Hg.)

    DASH The Eco House. Typologies of Space, Production and…

  • Catherine de Smet, Sara De Bondt (Hg.)

    Graphic Design: History in the Writing (1983–2011)

  • Robin Kinross

    Unjustified Texts. Perspectives on Typography

  • Elke Krasny (Hg.)

    Hands-On Urbanism 1850 - 2012

  • Maria Lind (Hg.)

    Performing the Curatorial With and Beyond Art

  • Jost Hochuli

    Das ABC eines Typografen

  • M. Ziehl, S. Oßwald, O. Hasemann, D.…

    Second Hand Spaces. Recycling Sites Undergoing Urban…

  • Michael Buhrs, Hannes Rössler (Hg.)

    Terunobu Fujimori. Architekt

  • Idea 352

    Video Game Graphic

  • Emanuel Christ, Christoph Gantenbein (…

    Typology. Hong Kong, Rome, New York, Buenos Aires. Review…

  • Slavs and Tatars

    Not Moscow Not Mecca

  • Lisa Robertson, Matthew Stadler (Hg.)

    Revolution. A Reader

  • Andrew Parker

    The Theorist's Mother

  • Okwui Enwezor (Hg.)

    Intense Proximity. The Anthology of the Near and the Far

  • Quentin Meillassoux

    The Number and the Siren

  • Kenneth E. Silver

    Making Paradise. Art, Modernity, and the Myth of the French…

  • Laurenz Brunner

    Amber. Anrhem Mode Biennale

  • Institut Mathildenhöhe Darmstadt (Hg.)

    A House Full of Music. Strategien in Musik und Kunst

  • Sophie Elisabeth Hochhäusl

    Otto Neurath - City Planning. Proposing a socio-political…

  • Susan Morgan (Hg.)

    Piecing Together Los Angeles. An Esther McCoy Reader

  • Magdalena Droste (Ed.)

    Lilly Reich. Designer and Architect

  • Jan Gehl

    Leben zwischen Häusern. Konzepte für den öffentlichen Raum

  • Xavier Antin

    Printing at Home

  • Vladimir Arkhipov

    Home-Made Europe. Contemporary Folk Artifacts

  • Alexander Eichenlaub

    Umbau mit Bestand. Nachhaltige Anpassungsstrategien für…

  • Eyal Weizman

    The Least of All Possible Evils

  • Architecture for Humanity

    Design Like You Give a Damn, Volume 2

  • Théo Lessour

    Berlin Sampler. From Cabaret to Techno: 1904-2012, a…

  • Nomadisch Grün (Hg.)

    Prinzessinnengärten. Anders gärtnern in der Stadt

  • David Harvey

    Rebel Cities. From the Right to the City to the Urban…

  • Kate Fletcher, Lynda Grose

    Fashion & Sustainability. Design for Change

  • Quinn Latimer

    Rumored Animals

  • Nikolaus Gansterer

    Drawing A Hypothesis. Figures of Thought

  • Jürgen Teller

    Bilder und Texte. Literatur

  • Roberto Gargiani, Anna Rosellini (Hg.)

    Le Corbusier. Beton Brut and Ineffable Space (1940 - 1965)

  • Brian O'Doherty

    Atelier und Galerie. Studio and Cube

  • Jill Stoner

    Toward a Minor Architecture

  • Jasper Morisson

    A world without words

  • Helmut Höge

    Spatzen

  • Boris Groys

    Introduction to Antiphilosophy

  • Raimundas Malasauskas

    Paper Exhibition. Selected Writings by Raimundas Malasauskas

  • The Otolith Group

    Thoughtform-La forma del pensiero

  • Gert Selle

    Die eigenen vier Wände. Wohnen als Erinnern

  • Pierre Keller (Hg.)

    Types We Can Make. A Selection of Contemporary Swiss Type…

  • Douglas Crimp

    Our Kind of Movie. The Films of Andy Warhol

  • Simona Malvezzi, Wilfried Kuehn

    Kuehn Malvezzi. Index

  • Garry Neill Kennedy

    The Last Art College. Nova Scotia College of Art and Design…

  • Joan Ockman

    Architecture School. Three Centuries of Educating…

  • Fucking Good Art #29

    Italian Conversations. Art in the Age of Berlusconi

  • Markus Miessen, Nina Valerie…

    Expothesis No2. Waking Up From The Nightmare Of…

  • Christof Migone

    Sonic Somatic. Performances of the Unsound Body

  • Adrian Shaughnessy, Tony Brook

    Kwadraat-Bladen A Series of Graphic Experiments 1955—74

  • 51N4E (Hg.)

    Reasons for Walling a House

  • Ute Frank (Hg.)

    Eklat. Entwerfen und Konstruieren in Lehre, Anwendung und…

  • Felix Denk, Sven von Thun

    Der Klang der Familie. Berlin, Techno und die Wende

  • Walter Benjamin

    The "Berlin Chronicle" Notices

  • Gerald Raunig

    Fabriken des Wissens. Streifen und Glätten 1

  • Jane Bennett

    Vibrant Matter. A Political Ecology of Things

  • Christiane Rösinger

    Liebe wird oft überbewertet. Ein Sachbuch

  • David Harvey

    Die urbanen Wurzeln der Finanzkrise

  • Jeffrey T. Schnapp, Adam Michaels

    The Electric Information Age Book

  • Christian Naujoks

    True Life / In Flames CD/LP

  • Winy Maas

    The Vertical Village. Individual, Informal, Intense

  • Andrew Shea

    Designing for Social Change

  • Ian Bogost

    How to Do Things with Videogames

  • Deborah Schneiderman

    Inside Prefab. The Ready-Made Interior

  • Beatriz Preciado

    Pornotopia. Architektur, Sexualität und Multimedia im…

  • Marc Angélil, Rainer Hehl (Hg.)

    Building Brazil!

  • Klanten, Ehmann, Sinofzik (Hg.)

    Introducing. Visual Identities for Small Businesses

  • Dietmar Dath, Barbara Kirchner

    Der Implex. Sozialer Fortschritt: Geschichte und Idee

  • Eva Grubinger, Jörg Heiser (Hg.)

    Sculpture Unlimited

  • Montreal CCA (Hg.)

    Imperfect Health. The Medicalization of Architecture

  • Jun Igarashi

    Construction of a State

  • Jérôme Knebusch

    Notizen zu Berlin

  • Ryan McGinley

    You and I

  • Magnus Ericson, Ramia Mazé (Hg.)

    Design Act. Socially and Politically Engaged Design Today

  • Nigel Coates

    Narrative Architecture

  • Lois Weinthal

    Toward a New Interior

  • Daniel Miller

    Das wilde Netzwerk. Ein ethnologischer Blick auf Facebook

  • Mark Borthwick

    Light up Playbutton

  • William E. Jones

    Halsted Plays Himself

  • Hans Ulrich Obrist, Kazuyo Sejima

    SANAA. The Conversation Series 26

  • Helen Armstrong, Zvezdana Stojmirovic

    Participate. Designing with User-Generated Content

  • Aaron Levy, William Menking

    Four Conversations on the Architecture of Discourse

  • 2G 60

    Lacaton & Vassal. Recent Work

  • Ilka Ruby, Andreas Ruby

    Lacaton & Vassal (2G Books)

  • Max Risselada (Hg.)

    Alison & Peter Smithson. A Critical Anthology

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    Räume der Mode

  • Miriam Bratu Hansen

    Cinema and Experience

  • ETH Studio Basel (Hg.)

    Belgrade. Formal/Informal

  • Michael Biggs, Henrik Karlsson

    Routledge Companion to Research in the Arts

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    Carlo Mollino. Maniera Moderna

  • Walter Benjamin

    Berlin Childhood circa 1900

  • Lida Hujic

    The First to Know. How Hipsters and Mavericks Shape the…

  • Archphoto 2.0

    Radical City 01

  • V. Smith, M. Taussig, I. Garcia (Hg.)

    Juan Downey. The Invisible Architect

IDEA 402. Opening paths with small press publishing: Independent Publisher and Future of Distribution in Japan

This issue’s feature will take a look behind the scenes of publishing. The world behind the words you read in the book you’re holding publishers, the people involved in the book’s production, locale, and details don’t really have any direct effect on the enjoyment you would derive from the book itself. The world is full of books; for those of us who want to read certain books at certain times, the work of those behind the publishing scene is as essential to us as the infrastructure that supports our daily lives. These past few years have brought with them a breakdown of norms. Gone are the bookshops we knew, and steadily fall the numbers of magazines and books published; we’re left with an anxiety surrounding the future of the publishing industry in Japan. Who is here to take on the task of weaving words, binding books, and circulating the publications to our future generations? This issue will focus on independent publishers opening paths for the future of publishing.

Even in the publishing industry in Japan and it’s chronic recession, the last few years has brought with it some encouraging news like the stay-at-home demand and digital comic sales driven by the corona pandemic. The paper publishing market continues to shrink however; the past 20 years has seen the number of bookstores nationwide plummeting to half, and the total number of publishers decreasing by around 40%. This is directly related to the decline in sales, and has also affected the performance of intermediaries handling the distribution of books between publishers and booksellers, which has occasionally led to bankruptcies. It is now evident that the Japanese distribution system is not viable anymore.

On the other hand, independent publishers also known sole-proprietorship publishers or small press continue to make their presence felt. Major publishers are focused on wide circulation and shackled to the idea of producing books based on thin profit margins; but unlike these companies, small press publishers produce books they truly find both interesting and deserving of being published; these small businesses work hard to reach their readership, even with the limited channels available to them. Small presses are often only supported by a single, or a few staff members at most.

With the internet and the spread of alternative distribution and sales routes through minor companies, books from small press publishers are more easily available through regular bookstores and online shops like Amazon. In recent years, encouraged with the growing number of independent bookstores and leveraging of information on social media, independent publishing businesses have established themselves as an alternative way to publish and sell books to an online audience.

This feature is focused on interviews with these publishers, the books with unique perspectives, themes, and book formats that they publish, and their attitudes toward publishing. Among the seven sole proprietorships and publishers introduced here̶ rn press, Seki Shobo, Inu no senaka-za, Shoshikankanbou, etc.books, and Minato no Hit0 some have only been around for five years, some have rejected the growth path and remain as sole proprietorships, and others have already reached their 20-year mark. Even with differences in scale and years of experience, all work towards the same goal of opening publication paths and building connections.

We have also asked three people to contribute their overlooking opinions of publishing and distribution in Japan to this feature: a long-time observer of the Japan publishing industry Akira Nagae, the bookshop Title (Ogikubo area, Tokyo) owner Yoshio Tsujiyama, and intermediary service Transview’s manager Hideyuki Kudo. In addition, we’re also including an essay from the book design historian Shoji Usuda, which attempts to connect Japan’s modern publishing history with the greater history of bookbinding. The second half contains a selection of books recommended by booksellers and publishing professionals in the hope that it will draw attention to not only the books but the publishers behind them as well.

Although, due to space reasons, we have been limited to the number of publishers we were able to interview for the feature, our initial research began with a list of over 50 to choose from. Even as you’re reading this feature, there are new publishers striking their roots in Japan. The shift trends from large publishers to small press, but publishing is still open to everyone.


IDEA Magazine
IDEA 402. Opening paths with small press publishing: Independent Publisher and Future of Distribution in Japan
Seibundo Shinkosha, 2023, IDEA402 2023.6
36,00 €