We inform you about the German book trade

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Every year, the Frankfurt Book Fair organises German Collective Stands at many book fairs worldwide.
Find the most important new releases from Germany at our collective stands. We are happy to tell you about the German publishing scene and can provide you with current trend reports.

The following PDF provides you with a list of the international book fairs, where you will find us at the German collective stands:
German collective stands

German Collective Stands around the world:

German - Language of Ideas

Cornelia Pieper

by Cornelia Pieper, Minister of State, Federal Foreign Office
It was the great German poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe who, in 1827, coined the term "world literature". For him, however, it had nothing to do with any literary canon. World literature emerged and developed, Goethe believed, through face-to-face contact between living, striving writers inspired by their interests and public spirit to contribute to the world around them. Hence for Goethe world literature meant literary communication between real people from different nations, a form of intellectual exchange that seeks to influence society at large.

In contrast to the way we think about it today, Goethe saw world literature as international communication, originally based in Europe but which would soon reach out to encompass the whole world. In this sense Germany’s book industry and the Frankfurter Buchmesse - Frankfurt Book Fair are indeed a vibrant part of world literature.

We at the Federal Foreign Office also want to play our part in promoting intellectual exchange and intercultural dialogue. Under the auspices of our cultural relations and education policy we support a range of activities geared to this end. We see the German language and culture, for example, as an excellent way to convey an accurate picture of contemporary Germany. A Germany that stands for openness and freedom, for tolerance and values, for success and a willingness to work hard, for education and innovation. Beyond that, however, our language and literature hold the key to many of the riches in Europe’s great cultural traditions and of course also to Europe’s largest economy. For all of these reasons, over 14 million people are now learning German. And in Europe there are actually more native speakers of German than any other language. In an integrated Europe we see multilingualism as a top educational priority. For us this means making even more people - and young people in particular - interested in learning German. For otherwise diversity will surely lose out not only in Europe but also in the wider globalized world.

This is the background to the "Germany - Language of Ideas" campaign that Federal Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle launched in February 2010. Over the next few years we want to encourage young people abroad to learn German and decision-makers to support their efforts.

The Federal Foreign Office is naturally also very keen for German books and literature to become better known around the world. That is why for many years now we have been working closely with the Frankfurt Book Fair and the German Publishers & Booksellers Association. Thanks to Federal Foreign Office funding, also small and medium-sized publishers now have a foothold in the international trade in intellectual property rights - through their participation in one or more of the over 20 collective German stands organized every year at international book fairs, through the work of our five German Book Offices abroad or through our translation promotion programmes. Diversity is a hallmark of our publishing industry and a reflection, too, of what Germany stands for: diversity of ideas, freedom of expression and a commitment to democratic values. And the diversity of the books themselves that are published here vividly testifies to German’s importance as a language of ideas.

For all these reasons I am delighted that the new international Book Fair newspaper über:blick with its mix of cultural coverage and factual information was so well received last year. So I hope this latest brainchild of the Federal Foreign Office and the Frankfurt Book Fair will attract a host of readers in 2011 as well.

Welcome to the second issue of über:blick

Juergen Boos

by Juergen Boos, Director of the Frankfurt Book Fair
Making new contacts, adding friends, finding followers – for all of us, networking is now the name of the game. Yet digital networking stirs a desire for genuine exchange: a handshake, eye contact, or a smile. There is a similar desire for exchange inside the book industry – especially today, in the throes of digital change. Which e-book formats is your company favouring? Where do you stand on cross media rights sales? People are getting together to share their experiences, prompting an increase in the number of successful international trade conferences in New Delhi, Shanghai, Los Angeles and, of course, at the Frankfurt Book Fair. Be it Tim O’Reilly’s Tools of Change conference, StoryDrive, or the Rights Directors Meeting, professional trade conferences with visionary speakers are more popular than ever before – also in Frankfurt. Lively networking, vibrant exchange – that’s what the BookFair is all about. Some impressions of these encounters can be found on the pages that follow. The world wide web – in the book industry, this web is also woven offline on a day-to day basis. The Frankfurt Book Fair, together with the Federal Foreign Office, promotes such contacts through the Book Information Centres and German Book Offices in New Delhi, New York, Moscow, Bucharest and Beijing. What topics interest Indian readers? Do books in China also need to be distributed for mobile publishing? Staff from these organisations support German publishers in such matters. And they are also available on-site to inform trade visitors about the Frankfurt Book Fair and the German market. As a result, the global network is becoming ever more closely meshed. And rightly so. All that now remains for me to say is: Enjoy your read

Welcome to über:blick

Ueberblick-logo

International issue in English
The fair newspaper "über:blick" offers facts and background reports on the German book- and publishing industry. It is launched by the Frankfurt Book Fair and sponsored by the German Foreign Office.
über:blick

 
May 10

10 - 13 May Warsaw International Book Fair

Stand 257, Sector B