Paul Kei Matsuda
http://matsuda.jslw.org/

Reprint

A friend of mine--a rising star in rhetoric and composition--told me recently that he has received a request for permission to reprint his article, which is quite an honor. He was wondering if there were any issues he should be aware of.

Here is my response (with a few minor changes):

Congratulations on having your article reprinted.

The answer depends on who owns the copyrights. If you signed a copyright release when you had your article published with the journal, then this is a courtesy request. You can say no and I’m sure the editor would honor that, but I don’t see why you wouldn’t want to have your article reprinted. The original publisher has the final say in whether to grant permission (and charge a fee).

If you kept your copyrights (or more precisely, part of the copyrights) concerning the right to reprint (which is unusual in humanities journals), then it would be your decision alone (though I would also have the editor contact the publisher just to be safe).

Normally, reprint authors in our fields don’t get any royalty, but it wouldn't hurt to ask to have a copy of the book sent to you. If you wish to make any minor changes to the article (typos, copy editor’s edits you didn’t like), you can also ask about it at this point. I wouldn’t make any major revisions at this point, though.

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Blog entries elsewhere

I've been asked to write about my experience with diversity and being a nonnative English speaking professional for other institutional blogs. Here are the "blog" sites:

NNEST of the Month Blog
http://nnest.asu.edu/blog/2008/01/paul-kei-matsuda.html


CCCC Blog
http://cccc-blog.blogspot.com/2008/07/individual-issue-of-language-diversity.html

The CCCC blog is supposed to be interactive--I hope many people will post comments and questions there.

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Last update: January 6, 2008