Writer's Digest

A Brief History of How Writers Earn a Living

Most writers take it for granted that they deserve to earn money from their creative labor. In fact, it’s common for publishers to be publicly shamed if they pay in “exposure” or charge fees. But historically speaking, the idea that writers should be paid for their work is a relatively new one. And it was the emergence of publications like Writer’s Digest, 100 years ago, that underlined a complete and utter transformation: a golden moment when writing could be pursued by anyone as a profitable profession, a profession that one could learn, and a profession that people would pay to excel in. But before any of that could happen, writing had to become a salable product.

THE EARLY AUTHORS

The birth of authorship—or at least authorship as we’d recognize it today in the Western world—came about with the invention of the printing press and the wide distribution and sale of books. At first, printers focused on producing the classics, or ancient texts that were in jeopardy of being lost and were in high demand. Up until then, manuscripts had to be reproduced by scribes, and it was a slow process. But once printers satisfied that demand, they started looking for other things to print and sell, and it

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Writer's Digest

Writer's Digest2 min read
Characterizing Through Relationships
Today is her forty-fifth birthday. She finds it hard to believe. Once she’d been young and she’d thought forty-five would come slow and impossible. She’d thought forty-five would be another world. But it came fast and it’s not what she thought it wou
Writer's Digest6 min read
Septet as Memoir
An old poet friend commemorated his 60th birthday by publishing a chapbook of sestets. I liked the idea, so in 2018, when I started my 70th year on this planet, I decided to write a collection of septets. I took my friend’s idea a couple steps furthe
Writer's Digest6 min read
Escalate Conflict to Keep Readers Turning Pages
Every great story depends on conflict to propel it forward. Conflict is found in your book’s overarching concept—the big idea—expressed in a way that highlights the tug-of-war between opposing forces. The more profound the conflict, the more compelli

Related Books & Audiobooks