Must writers be moral? In the #MeToo moment, their contracts may require it
When
you see publishers
and authors chatting chummily at book parties, you’re likely to think that
they’re on the same side — the side of great literature and the free flow of
ideas.
In
reality, their interests are at odds. Publishers are marketers. They don’t like
scandals that might threaten their bottom line — or the bottom lines of the
multinational media conglomerates of which most form a small part. Authors are
people, often flawed. Sometimes they behave badly. How, for instance, should
publishers deal with the #MeToo
era, when accusations of sexual impropriety can lead to books being pulled
from shelves and syllabuses, as happened last year with the novelists Junot
Díaz and Sherman Alexie?
One
answer is the increasingly widespread “morality clause.” Over the past few
years, Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins and Penguin Random House have added
such clauses to their standard book contracts. Read
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