sales for academic monographs were never exactly high. for an academic book to sell in the 1000s was rare in the pre-digital era. 95% of the sales are to university libraries as they are the only buyers who can afford it. private individual readers, again, are not picking up that 220-page, $200 stanford university press monograph.
it would be best if you didn't just glean some random article without context off the internet, when you clearly have no idea what you're talking about.
sales of regular trade history books, the sort you find in high-street bookstores, stocked nationwide, seldom sell > 2,500 copies. that's considered a 'good success' by any metric. again, i doubt you understand any of this context. is the 'book dying' and the journal article evidently so much better a format because of book sales? there's just way too much to unpack and explain to even support your argument. sales figures have nothing to do with the suitability or merits of books.
i don't even know why you're still persevering in arguing about academic monographs when people commented on your lack of reading in general. nobody ever expected you to be reading academic monographs for fun. they are specialist texts intended for an audience of academic peers and fellow researchers. useful for cribbing from if you're a student, passing through the university on towards other things, but not exactly riveting reads for a general audience. you're putting way too much emphasis on the format of the academic monograph. you don't read ANYTHING. have you even been to a book store? they don't stock academic monographs! dipshit!
But if you agree with this notion you'll have to concur there's merit in my statement that most good ideas can be reduced to article form, either before or after the publication of a book. It's not an outlandish statement
your statement was that BOOKS could be reduced to a pithy article format, not academic monographs, which are necessarily meant to be long expositions and in-depth scholarly treatments. i said that's bullshit and countered that a life of napoleon wouldn't fit in a journal article. to which you replied 'those are only for hobbyists'. lmfao. it's like you don't know anything about general book-buying audiences.
Last edited by uziq (2020-07-03 03:28:14)