A while back I was contacted by a publishing group calling themselves “Lambert Academic Publishing (LAP)”, expressing an interest in “publishing my thesis”. A short exchange of emails made it clear that the woman who sent the email had no idea what my thesis was about, what sort of thesis we were talking about, or actually whether I had a thesis she could publish at all.
I realized, as I had suspected all along, that this was a standardized email sent an mass to people employed at universities and colleges around the world. The company presented its business-idea as making all sorts of academic work that normally only collect dust on local campus libraries available online as print-on-demand. Basically, I think this sounds as a good idea, but I did not like the way the company tried to present itself as a genuine academic publishing house. This kind of subtle falsehood is, in my view not compatible with academic values. In addition, publishing with them would mean giving them rights to my work.
However, I thought the idea of making old academic works available for a larger audience sounded good. If only there was a way I could do this without the pretence and dishonesty, and without giving away the rights to my own work.




Som noen sikkert har fått med seg, hadde jeg en kronikk i Dagbladet på lørdag. Jeg har fått så mange fine og morsomme tilbakemeldinger på den - 


Like Antonio Gramsci found himself confined to Mussolini's dungeons, having to jot down short lines of thought in small notebooks, I at times find myself confined to the kitchen table, by a laptop, forced by an uncontrollable impulse to comment on something I have seen or read, to write a few short lines about some subject.
