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Platformed audio fiction : How streaming and audiobook imaginaries transform contemporary publishing in Sweden

Tanderup Linkis, Sara LU orcid and Pennlert, Julia (2026) In Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies p.1-16
Abstract
The article examines how the audiobook’s increasing centrality on the contemporary book market influences publishing strategies. Departing from the case of Sweden, where audiobooks are primarily distributed via subscription-based streaming services, the article is based on interviews with 12 Swedish publishers and streaming service representatives. Thus, it contributes with a producer perspective to existing research in audiobooks, which is mostly centred on the consumption aspect and what audiobooks do to reading and uses of literature. Analysing interview results through the theoretical lens of platformization, the article shows how the publishers’ ideas and strategies related to audiobooks, what we call ‘audiobook imaginaries’, are... (More)
The article examines how the audiobook’s increasing centrality on the contemporary book market influences publishing strategies. Departing from the case of Sweden, where audiobooks are primarily distributed via subscription-based streaming services, the article is based on interviews with 12 Swedish publishers and streaming service representatives. Thus, it contributes with a producer perspective to existing research in audiobooks, which is mostly centred on the consumption aspect and what audiobooks do to reading and uses of literature. Analysing interview results through the theoretical lens of platformization, the article shows how the publishers’ ideas and strategies related to audiobooks, what we call ‘audiobook imaginaries’, are connected to streaming platform imaginaries. Rather than producing texts ‘for sound’, publishers strategically focus on texts that are expected to perform well on the streaming platforms, resulting in preferences for serial fiction and in publishing strategies inspired by other streaming media. The article finally discusses how the audiobook boom pushes parts of the Scandinavian publishing industry towards cross-industry logics of streaming and platformization, resulting in an imagined fragmentation of the book market, as audiobooks and printed books are understood to exist in two different spheres that include different genres sold in different spaces, to (partly) different audiences. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
keywords
Audiobooks, Platforms, Audio fiction, Imaginaries, Publishing, Sweden, audiobooks, streaming services, platformization, audiobook imaginaries, digital publishing, book production
in
Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies
pages
16 pages
publisher
SAGE Publications
ISSN
1354-8565
DOI
10.1177/13548565261417921
project
Mellan ljud och text. Produktion, innehåll och upplevelser av multimodal ljudlitteratur.
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
eb5b6e37-3be2-48b2-bf44-de6d6ef296e3
date added to LUP
2026-01-23 16:56:09
date last changed
2026-02-17 10:10:05
@article{eb5b6e37-3be2-48b2-bf44-de6d6ef296e3,
  abstract     = {{The article examines how the audiobook’s increasing centrality on the contemporary book market influences publishing strategies. Departing from the case of Sweden, where audiobooks are primarily distributed via subscription-based streaming services, the article is based on interviews with 12 Swedish publishers and streaming service representatives. Thus, it contributes with a producer perspective to existing research in audiobooks, which is mostly centred on the consumption aspect and what audiobooks do to reading and uses of literature. Analysing interview results through the theoretical lens of platformization, the article shows how the publishers’ ideas and strategies related to audiobooks, what we call ‘audiobook imaginaries’, are connected to streaming platform imaginaries. Rather than producing texts ‘for sound’, publishers strategically focus on texts that are expected to perform well on the streaming platforms, resulting in preferences for serial fiction and in publishing strategies inspired by other streaming media. The article finally discusses how the audiobook boom pushes parts of the Scandinavian publishing industry towards cross-industry logics of streaming and platformization, resulting in an imagined fragmentation of the book market, as audiobooks and printed books are understood to exist in two different spheres that include different genres sold in different spaces, to (partly) different audiences.}},
  author       = {{Tanderup Linkis, Sara and Pennlert, Julia}},
  issn         = {{1354-8565}},
  keywords     = {{Audiobooks; Platforms; Audio fiction; Imaginaries; Publishing; Sweden; audiobooks; streaming services; platformization; audiobook imaginaries; digital publishing; book production}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{01}},
  pages        = {{1--16}},
  publisher    = {{SAGE Publications}},
  series       = {{Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies}},
  title        = {{Platformed audio fiction : How streaming and audiobook imaginaries transform contemporary publishing in Sweden}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13548565261417921}},
  doi          = {{10.1177/13548565261417921}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}