30 April 2006 @ 07:51 pm
That plagiarism case  
I've been avoiding commenting here on the Kaavya Viswanathan plagiarism case, but since I find myself repeatedly commenting elsewhere instead, here are my thoughts:

- Viswanathan's book was handled through a book packager, 17th Street Productions. I'm hearing a lot of bitterness about the size of Viswanathan's advance, but keep in mind that it was for two books and she (probably) split it with a book packager. When you figure those things in, the advance becomes high, but hardly obscene.

- Notice that no one has been pressing the packager for comment, complaining that they were paid too much money, or asking where their editorial oversight is. Even though the money didn't all flow to the author, everyone's happy to let the blame do so.

- Before wondering how any writer could stolen someone else's words, at least read some excerpts from Viswanathan's novel. (More excerpts here.) These are not quite simple instances of cut-and-pasting. The number of places Viswanathan's material echoes McCafferty's gives me pause; but any one of these excerpts, without all the others, really could have been subconscious. And directly importing and rewriting all those passages would have been more work than just coming up with something new. The work clearly was plagiarized; it could have been plagiarized on purpose; but none of us public lookers-on has enough information to know this.

- I'm finding the amount of glee many people, including many writers, are taking in watching Viswanathan's fall pretty uncomfortable. It's enough that the matter was brought to Megan McCafferty's attention and that her publisher and Viswanathan's publisher have come to an agreement and the plagiarized material is being pulled. As far as I can tell, McCafferty has been a class act throughout. If she can manage that, surely those reporting on the case (whether formal media or those just blogging it) could do the same.
 
 
( 9 comments — Post a new comment )
Karen[info]quiller77 on May 1st, 2006 05:09 am (UTC)
McCafferty has been a class act throughout. If she can manage that, surely those reporting on the case (whether formal media or those just blogging it) could do the same.

An excellent point, Janni. I don't understand the fascination in general of gloating over people who fall from grace.
maggie l. wood[info]faerie_writer on May 1st, 2006 12:08 pm (UTC)
Yeah, it's the book packagers *I* would like to see squirm, not KV. I feel like they exploited her, pre-packaged her writing the way music producers pre-package pop stars. To me they were selling her age, beauty and culture and the writing was secondary.
beth_bernobich: terpischord[info]beth_bernobich on May 1st, 2006 12:56 pm (UTC)
What You Said.
madrobins[info]madrobins on May 1st, 2006 03:06 pm (UTC)
I think a certain amount of it is a class thing. If Viswanathan were attending Wombat Junior College in East Overshoe, I'm not certain there would be as much gloating; this reflects back on the university in the same way that plagiarism and other such scandals at the New York Times or Washington Post reflect back on the papers in a way that a scandal at the Wombat Times and Picayune of East Overshoe would not.

some guy named Larry[info]lnhammer on May 1st, 2006 06:45 pm (UTC)
*tries to not wish he'd gotten a degree from Wombat Junior College*

*fails*

---L.
madrobins[info]madrobins on May 1st, 2006 08:09 pm (UTC)
They don't have the budget of Wombat State, but they've got a killer curling team, and a lot of heart.
Janni Lee Simner[info]janni on May 1st, 2006 08:11 pm (UTC)
Yeah, but then we'd never have met, and you'd no doubt be married to some pretty young marsupial by now.
Hannah[info]buymeaclue on May 1st, 2006 04:09 pm (UTC)
Good post. Thank you.

I heard a segment on NPR the other day where they were asking why editors don't go through new books and similar already-published books looking for instances of possible plagiarism. It was the first time I've ever wanted to call in and ask, "Which part of cost/benefit ratios do you not understand?" Good gravy.
DarcyJavanne[info]darcyk_j on May 1st, 2006 08:15 pm (UTC)
Whenever issues like this come up, my question is: is it flagrant plagiarism, or is just derivative?

Only one person can answer that: the author.