Editor |
An Editor is a person who prepares texttypically language, but also images and Soundsfor publication by correcting, condensing, or otherwise modifying it. In career terms, the word has four major senses:
Onto these career categories are mapped the categories in which individual professionals specialize, including language, still images, cinema/video, sound, computer programming code, and music scores. These areas sometimes overlap in individual practitioners; for example, language editors may comment on or make alterations to graphics and photographs embedded in a job that mostly comprises language; sound editors may make alterations in the linguistic text of, for example, a sound interview, to improve the intended meaning or reduce the duration of an item.
Editing , as applied to language, is sometimes contrasted with terms that imply more restricted functions: copyediting (checking for consistency and accuracy) and proofreading (marking errors). The boundaries between the meanings of these terms are not universally accepted.
= Etymology =
According to the Oxford English Dictionary , editor comes from the Latin phrase e ditus which means to put forward . The editor ludorum in Ancient Rome was the person who put on the games. In French language, editeur means publisher . Also in italian language editore means publisher . The word came into English language from French. The verb to edit is a back formation from editor .
= Print media =
Human editors in the print publishing industry include people who are responsible for:
*newspapers and wire services; see below. *organizing anthologies and other compilations. *organizing and publishing a magazine —. The top editor may be called editor-in-chief . *producing a definitive edition of a classic author s works — a scholarly editor . *organizing and managing contributions to a multi-author book — symposium editor or volume editor . *finding marketable ideas and presenting them to appropriate authors — a sponsoring editor . *obtaining copy or recruiting authors — such as the acquisitions editor or commissioning editor for a publishing house. *improving an author s writing so that they indeed say what they want to say, in an effective manner — a substantive editor . Depending on the writer s skill, this editing can sometimes turn into ghost writer. Substantive editing is seldom a title. Many types of editors do this type of work, either in-house at a publisher or on an independent basis. *correcting spelling, grammar, and matters of house style — a copyediting . But copy editors at newspapers usually also have greater and higher responsibilities, which may include the design of pages and the selection of news stories for inclusion. At U.K. newspapers, the term is sub-editor. *choosing the layout of the publication and communicating with the printer — a production editor. This and similar jobs are also called layout editor, design editor, news designer, or -- more so in the past -- makeup editor.
The smaller the publication, the more these roles run together. In particular, the substantive editor and copy editor often overlap: *Fact-checking can be the responsibility of either. *Copy editors who find an inappropriate term or phrase will often suggest or make an improvement.
== Executive editor ==
The top editor sometimes has the title executive editor or editor-in-chief (the former is replacing the latter in the language). This person is generally responsible for the content of the publication. The exception is that newspapers that are large enough usually have a separate editor for the editorials and opinion pages.
The executive editor sets the publication standards for performance, and is responsible for assuring the highest standards of ethical conduct in the process of gathering and presenting information, as well as for motivating and developing the staff. The executive editor is also responsible for developing and maintaining the publication budget. In concert with the publisher and the operating committee, the executive editor is responsible for strategic and operational planning.
== Newspapers ==
Editors at newspapers supervise journalists and improve their work.
Newspaper editing encompasses a variety of titles and functions. These include:
The term city editor is used differently in North America, where it refers to the editor responsible for the news coverage of a newspaper s local circulation area (also sometimes called metro editor ), and in the United Kingdom, where (normally with a capital C ) it refers to the editor responsible for coverage of business in the City of London and, by extension, coverage of business and finance in general.
= External links =
Professional associations: *[http://www.aasfe.org/index.html American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors] *[http://www.copydesk.org/ American Copy Editors Society] *[http://www.asbpe.org/ American Society of Business Publication Editors], for trade magazines *[http://www.magazine.org/Editorial/ American Society of Magazine Editors] *[http://www.asne.org/ American Society of Newspaper Editors], mainly for top editors at daily newspapers *[http://www.apme.com/ Associated Press Managing Editors] *[http://apse.dallasnews.com/ Associated Press Sports Editors] *[http://www.psu.edu/dept/comm/aope/ Association of Opinion Page Editors] *[http://www.the-efa.org/ Editorial Freelancers Association], based in the USA *[http://www.editors.ca/ Editors Association of Canada] *[http://www.mssu.edu/iswne/ International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors] *[http://www.newsombudsmen.com/ Organization of News Ombudsmen] for readers editors and ombudsmen *[http://www.wan-press.org/rubrique.php3id_rubrique=8 World Editors Forum] Online resources: *[http://tc.eserver.org/dir/Editing EServer TC Library: Editing] *[http://www.sfwa.org/beware/bookdoctors.html Writer Beware on Independent Editors]
Articles:
|
|