Joel Waldfogel holds the Frederick R. Kappel Chair at the University of Minnesota's Carlson School of Management. His books include Scroogenomics: Why You Shouldn't Buy Presents for the Holidays (Princeton). Twitter @JWaldfogel
The title of his compelling new book--Digital Renaissance--betrays his optimistic thesis, which he backs up with some creative data-sleuthing. . . . Waldfogel's book offers reassurance to those who fear that the new regime of ones and zeros is undermining cultural production. But his assessment will be far less comforting to denizens of the traditional cultural-industrial complex, not to mention the cultural pessimists bewailing its decline. . . . The big winners in this renaissance, aside from Amazon, Apple, Netflix, and similar platforms, appear to be the outsiders who couldn't get past the gatekeepers of old, and consumers of culture, who get much more for less. ---Daniel Akst, Strategy+Business Is it the best of times or the worst of times for the entertainment industry? It depends on whether you ask the producers or the consumers. Distilling knowledge gleaned from years of research, Joel Waldfogel digs into this question with gusto and comes up with a definitive answer for all. --Hal R. Varian, Chief Economist, Google Digital Renaissance provides a useful counterpoint to much of the doom and gloom commonly expressed in the popular media about the impact of digitization on culture. Joel Waldfogel is a leading authority on the subject, and this book will spark quite a debate. --Catherine Tucker, MIT Sloan School of Management Digital Renaissance makes a real contribution to the economics of the Internet and the economics of art and culture. --Tyler Cowen, George Mason University Itself a cornucopia of data and evidence on digitization in the creative industries, Digital Renaissance provides a valuable record of the outpouring of cultural production in recent years. --Ruth Towse, Bournemouth University The effect of the digital economy on film, music, and the arts is something about which everybody has an opinion and almost nobody has any evidence. Into this heated debate comes Joel Waldfogel, whose lucid, fascinating, and witty evidence-based account of how digital technology is transforming our cultural lives should be read by anyone who cares about the future of our society. --Paul Seabright, author of The Company of Strangers: A Natural History of Economic Life The internet . . . has given consumers around the world access to an unimaginable trove of music, movies, television shows and books, all at the touch of a button. But it sometimes seems as if the deluge is watering down popular culture. . . . Joel Waldfogel begs to disagree. In Digital Renaissance, he argues that we not only have more reading, viewing and listening material than ever before, but it's better. And he's got data to back that up. Boy does he have data. ---Amanda Gomez, Reuters This is a seriously fun book. Fun because it is about entertainment and it is entertaining. Serious because it looks carefully at data. And the news is good: we are in a digital renaissance not a digital dark age. --David K. Levine, European University Institute Digital Renaissance should be consulted by any regulator or legislator being solicited by a forlorn media mogul looking to protect a traditional business from disruptive market forces. ---Jonathan A. Knee, New York Times DealBook