A Work Thing ------------ It's not that my muse has deserted me, so much that it's become a bit scattered lately. And, more to the point, I just haven't felt strongly motivated to write anything for the past few weeks. However, it's been a long time since I let a whole (calendar) month go by in silence, and for some reason I'm reluctant to do so now, so I'd better dash something off before November draws to its rapidly impending close. When it comes to finding things to write about, though ... well, we've got the big stuff, that stubbornly fails to cohere into a pithy phlog post. And then we've got the small stuff, that's maybe too trivial to be of much interest - to others certainly, and possibly even to myself. But if we can look past its triviality, maybe the small stuff can at least gesture in the direction of something of greater import. Let's give it a shot. As the title says, this is about a Work Thing, which as faithful readers will no doubt recall, means it's a University Library Thing. Moreover, it falls into the categories of Something That Almost Never Happens, and also possibly A Reversal of the Natural Order. Which is to say, our Library is (or soon will be) cancelling our subscriptions to the online versions of several Canadian academic journals. So far, so unremarkable - we cancel journal subscriptions all the time. But in this case, we will be replacing our online subscriptions with print subscriptions. And yes, I do mean dead trees shaved fine, bound into tidy packages, delivered via our increasingly under-resourced postal service, ultimately resident on shelves, etc. Like how we did libraries back when we lived in caves. And that is unusual. What happened, see, was that a certain Canadian University Press (CUP) signed an exclusive deal with a Large American Distributor (LAD), under the terms of which Our University Library (OUL) can only subscribe to the online versions of CUP content from LAD. Meanwhile, LAD has taken inspiration from the ECC (last two letters stand for Cable Company) that, as we all know, conveniently chunks up its content such that it is impossible to subscribe to everything you want, unless you also pay a small fortune to subscribe to a bunch of stuff you don't want, as well. In other words, instead of offering CUP content in one convenient package, it is spread out across a whole whack of other packages in such a way that we'd have to spend many tens of thousands of dollars to subscribe to the few journals we want, that clock a few hundred PDF article downloads per month. So we're saying, to heck with that (or words to that effect), and going old school. I suggested that maybe we could sell this initiative to faculty by calling this the "printphile" edition, kind of like how audiophiles prefer vinyl records. I'm not sure this suggestion will be taken very seriously, although it may be taken as seriously as it deserves. Be that as it may, I have to say I'm proud of OUL for taking this stand (it wasn't my call). Parenthetically, it does kind of surprise me that there even are print editions of these journals, at this point in time. So many academic journals have gone online-only, as the market for print (never that large to begin with) has more or less dried up in recent years. (And I can foresee a time when academic libraries might not even have shelves to put things on, though I'm pleased to note we're a long way from that ourselves.) Anyhow, good thing that, in this case at least, there was an alternative, as absurd as it fundamentally is. Finally, I would be remiss if I failed to note that all of this is just plain crazy, that universities are subject to this kind of price gouging. But we have only ourselves to blame. We could have taken ownership of the means of academic publication back in the 90s and made our research literature freely accessible to whoever wanted to read it, if we'd been on the ball. Instead we continued to shovel money at commercial publishers and distributors, who use their monopolies to extract exhorbitant rents, and lock our research (much of it publicly funded, by the way) away behind paywalls. But counterfactual expeditions to the fabled land of Open Access Publishing have been wandering about for years, and I know from hard-won experience the well-worn trail of thought we are presently following leads only into dry and leafless thickets of verbiage wholly unsuited to the humble medium of the phlog. Let us rest instead on this convenient, newly arrived box of periodicals, eat our sandwiches, and contemplate the evening sun lighting up the freshly bound volumes on the shelves. Sun 30 Nov 2025 04:47:43 PM PST