Friday, September 29, 2023

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Announcing the Publication of Dis Life No Balance

I understand an academic to be a person working in teaching and or research in a  higher education institution.

On Fri, Sep 29, 2023, 10:06 PM cornelius...@gmail.com <corneliushamelberg@gmail.com> wrote:
"ex-academics such as Ken" ?  

Has Ken ceased being an academic? 

On Friday, 29 September 2023 at 11:33:11 UTC+2 Oluwatoyin Adepoju wrote:
Edited

Magnificent.

Publishing strategy is also striking in demonstrating Nigerian immigrant scholars in the Western academy publishing in Nigeria and working with a Nigeria based bookseller to distribute widely in Nigeria as well as making the book available to the international market through Amazon.

Both book title and choice of publisher are instructively similar to those of Pius Adesanmi's Naija No Dey Carry Last, a particularly successful North American academic whose greatest visibility might have been through his online activity and who also published a pidgin English titled book in Nigeria, I think, which perhaps collected some of his online essays.

The choice of a publisher in Nigeria as well as using a Nigerian bookseller as a primary sales and distribution center  in Nigeria has enabled the selling  price in Nigeria to be lower than the international, Amazon price, along with using flexible payment options represented by various installmental payment plans, an ingenious approach in itself, within a canny distribution strategy.

Ken's observation comparing his own latest book with this one is striking, inspiring reflection.

Responding to Ken's observation, one must note, however, the broader spectrum of issues involved in relation to book publication, particularly by academics, scholars working in higher education, such as Moses and Farooq and ex-academics, such as Ken, particularly in Western academia.

What factors influence how people in such demographics publish their work?

If this new book were to be what is conventionally understood as a scholarly text instead of a more general interest set of reflections which I understand it to be  would the authors be likely to publish with the publisher they used?

A trade publisher and one in Lagos?

There are so many issues involved.

Are Plato's books not closer to the idea of general reflections in terms of which I described Moses et al's new book and with  the book's inclusion of what seems to a dialogical essay, the dialogical essay being an exploratory form which seems never to have been a favoured approach In Western academia, an attitude diffused through  it's global dominance,  even though its a form represented by Plato, regarded as the greatest Western philosopher and played a central role in such a long standing tradition as Hindu scholarship? 

In relation to publishing locations, it would be great to find a way in which academics in the West can publish with those Western publishers they conventionally publish with, such pro-academic publishers as university presses, eg Cambridge, Harvard, Oxford etc and others such as Routledge and Bloomsbury Academic, if I recall the name correctly, all these being publishers whose print prices are often not cheap, even in terms of Western currencies, and whose Africa penetration is often weak, as well as publish with other kinds of publishers in other places

I understand, and wish to be educated if the facts are different, that academics in Western institutions need to publish with publishers with a strong record of scholarly publishing if their work is to  carry adequate weight in their institutional contexts and the most recognized of such publishers by the Western academy are in the West.

These are different from trade publishers although Bloomsbury, famous for publishing J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series, make themselves an exception through their scholarly arm, Bloomsbury Academic, while Penguin seems to have informally achieved a degree of crossover status, as with Robert McFarlane's Mountains of the Mind, combing narrative and history with scholarship in a manner engaging for the general reader, McFarlane being an academic whose publishing choices as a Cambridge Uni Reader in English whose choices of publishers may be seen as unconventional in Western academia, publishing almost solely with trade publishers, specifically Penguin, choices that look logical in relation to his style of writing and it's consequent audience penetration.

My earlier considerations about the privileging of Western scholarly/academic publishers in the Western academy may have influenced the fact that all Moses' sole authored books I can find on Amazon, except one, and his edited book on African entrepreneurship, conventional scholarly texts, are published by Indiana University Press, one of the strongest in African Studies, even though they have many other interests.

His other sole authored book, a collection of essays, is published by Kwasi Konadu's Diasporic Africa Press, another scholarly publisher, with a rising profile.

I get the impression, though, that Moses' scholarly credentials are likely defined by the books published by Indiana on account of being books developing a sustained argument across the expansive range of a text of a particular length, as well as by his publications in scholarly journals.

I get the impression that sole authored books of such scope are understood in the Western academy as vital in demonstrating a scholar's capacity.

I understand essay collections are also valued but not as much as books, except in rare cases, as with that of Abiola Irele,  who made his name through essays and one book well before his entry into the Western academy, and in even rarer cases,  scholars who do not even collect their essays into books but are recognized as strategic figures in their fields,  such as Oxford Hinduism prof emeritus Alexis Sanderson, who wrote no book nor even put his essays together into a book, as far as I know, but the exceptional character of those essays in terms of their combination of penetrating analysis and encyclopedic range  within a painstaking grounding in the native  language of the subject, Sanskrit,  being evident even to a person with a basic acquaintance with the field.

It just occured to me that I could  approach Sanderson to organize his essays into a book, and sell through print on demand on Amazon, and after making enough profit, plough some of it into print publishing.

It would be interesting to compare the publishing careers of Farooq, Adesanmi and Moses  as Diaspora Nigerian scholars in the Western academy who are also keenly engaged with Nigeria and Africa, particularly through social media, and that of Toyin Falola, a scholar in the same demographic, whose social media activity is different and possibly with those of such Diaspora and/or ex Diaspora scholars who are not Nigerian,  and with diaspora African academics who are not based in the West.

What is the significance of the publishing histories of these scholars in terms of institutionally shaped and individually driven publishing decisions at various stages of an academic's career, in relation to the scholar's social origins- diaspora or native- and institutional placement?

Such a mapping feeds into the question of expectations for audience interest and of how to address audiences in the writing process and in publishing 

Which audiences are likely to be reached by Moses and Farooq's conventional scholarly texts as different from those more likely to be reached by this new books of theirs and their social  media activity which this book is likely to be closer to?

Who are those likely to be reached by Falola's book on Farooq, a scholar who is perhaps most visible as a public intellectual in his online activity even as he functions effectively as a US academy scholar?

How do choice of publishers shape these issues?

How much would the answers change if the publishers of all these books are also based in Nigeria and perhaps distributed beyond Nigeria?

Falola has published one or perhaps both of his autobiographies with Bookcraft in Nigeria. What are the implications of that in comparison with almost all his other books being published in the West and his relatively recent distribution of his publishing choices among some of the more prestigious Western publishers, such as Cambridge,  Bloomsbury Academic and perhaps Routledge, if I recall correctly?

On another note, I suspect that a strategic frontier for the scholarly text market is social media, particularly in countries like Nigeria, where smartphone penetration is high and social media is vibrant within a weak library and bookshop culture.

Thanks

Toyin
Show quoted text

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Oluwatoyin Adepoju <ovde...@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 29, 2023, 6:32 AM
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Announcing the Publication of Dis Life No Balance
To: usaafricadialogue <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>


Magnificent.

Publishing strategy is also striking in demonstrating Nigerian immigrant scholars in the Western academy publishing in Nigeria and working with a Nigeria based bookseller to distribute widely in Nigeria at well as making the book available to the international market through Amazon.

Both book title and choice of publisher are instructively similar to those of Pius Adesanmi's Naija No Dey Carry Last, a particularly successful North American academic whose greatest visibility might have been through his online activity and who also published a pidgin English titled book in Nigeria, I think, which perhaps collected some of his online essays.

The choice of a publisher in Nigeria as well as using a Nigerian bookseller as a primary selling point in Nigeria has enabled the seeling in price in Nigeria to be lower, along with using flexible payment options represented by various installmental payment plans, an ingenious approach initself, within a canny distribution strategy.

Ken's observation comparing his own latest book with this one is striking inspiring reflection.

Responding to Ken's observation, one must note, however, the broader spectrum of issues involved in relation to book publication, particularly by academics, scholars working in higher education, such as Moses and Farooq and ex-academics, such as Ken, particularly in Western academia.

What factors influence how people in such demographics publish their work?

If this book were to be what is conventionally understood as a scholarly text instead of a more general interest set of reflections would the authors be likely to publish with the publisher they used?

A trade publisher and one in Lagos?

There are so many issues involved.

It would be great to find a way in which academics in the West can publish with those Western publishers they conventionally publish with, such pro-academic publishers as university presses, eg Cambridge, Harvard, Oxford etc and others such as Routledge and Bloomsbury Academic, if I recall the name correctly, all these being publishers whose print prices are often not cheap, even in terms of Western currencies, and whose Africa penetration is often weak, as well as publish with other kinds of publishers in other places

I understand, and wish to be educated if the facts are different, that academics in Western institutions need to publish with publishers with a strong record of scholarly publishing if their work is carry weight in their institutional contexts and the most recognized of such publishers by the Western academy are in the West.

These are different from trade publishers although Bloomsbury, famous for publishing J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series, make themselves an exception through their scholarly arm, Bloomsbury Academic. 

These considerations may have influenced the fact that all Moses' sole authored books I can find on Amazon, except one, and his edited book on African entrepreneurship, conventional scholarly texts, are published by Indiana University Press, one of the strongest in African Studies, even though they have many other interests.

His other sole authored book, a collection of essays, is published by Kwasi Konadu's Diasporic Africa Press, another scholarly publisher, with a rising profile.

I get the impression, though, that Moses' scholarly credentials are likely defined by the books published by Indiana on account of being books developing a sustained argument across the expansive range of a text of a particular length, as well as by his publications in scholarly journals.

I get the impression that sole authored books of such scope are understood in the Western academy as vital in demonstrating a scholar's capacity.

I understand essay collections are also valued but not as much as books, except in rare cases, as with those of Abiola Irele,  who made his name through essays and one book well before his entry into the Western academy, and in even rarer cases,  scholars who do not even collect their essays into books but are recognized as strategic figures in their fields,  such as Oxford Hinduism prof emeritus Alexis Sanderson, who wrote no book nor even put his essays together into a book, as far as I know, but the exceptional character of those essays being evident even to a person with a basic acquaintance in the field.

It just occured to me that I could  approach Sanderson to organize his essays into a book, and sell through print on demand on Amazon, and after making enough profit, plough some of it into print publishing.

It would be interesting to and compare the publishing careers of Farooq, Pius Adesanmi and Moses Ochonu as Diaspora Nigerian scholars in the Western academy who are also keenly engaged with Nigeria and Africa, particularly through social media, and that of Toyin Falola, a scholar in the same demographic, whose social media activity is different and possibly with those of such Diaspora and/or ex Diaspora scholars who are not Nigerian,  and with diaspora African academics who are not based in the West.

What is the significance of the publishing histories of these scholars in terms of institutionally shaped and individually driven publishing decisions at various stages of an academic's career, in relation to the scholar's social origins- diaspora or native- and institutional placement?

Such a mapping feeds into the question of expectations for audience interest and of how to address audiences in the writing process and in publishing 

Which audiences are likely to be reached by Moses and Farooq's conventional scholarly texts as different from those more likely to be reached by this new books of theirs and their social  media activity which this book is likely to be closer to?

Who are those likely to be reached by Falola's book on Farooq, a scholar who is perhaps most visible as a public intellectual in his online activity even as he functions effectively as a US academy scholar?

How do choice of publishers shape these issues?

How much would the answers change if the publishers of all these books are also based in Nigeria and perhaps distribute beyond Nigeria?

Falola has published one or perhaps both of his autobiographies with Bookcraft in Nigeria. What are the implications of that in comparison with almost all his other books, published in the West and his relatively recent distribution of his publishing choices among some of the more prestigous Western publishers, such as Cambridge,  Bloomsbury Academic and perhaps Routledge, if I recall correctly?

On another note, I suspect that a strategic frontier for the scholarly text market is social media, particularly in countries like Nigeria, where smartphone penetration is high and social media is vibrant within a weak library and bookshop culture.

Thanks

Toyin


On Fri, Sep 29, 2023, 12:23 AM Harrow, Kenneth <har...@msu.edu> wrote:
What a wonderful accomplishment!! I congratulate you also on your platform of distribution which is so important. I felt helpless before my publisher when informed how my books were to be priced and distributed. Let your new volume be a model for us all to try to emulate. The essays and topics look compelling and highly significant. Mabruk! Congrats guys, great work.
Ken

From: usaafric...@googlegroups.com <usaafric...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Moses Ebe Ochonu <meoc...@gmail.com>
Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2023 3:53:16 PM
To: USAAfricaDialogue <USAAfric...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Announcing the Publication of Dis Life No Balance
 


I am thrilled to announce the publication of our new book of essays titled Dis Life No Balance: An Anthology of Nigerian Diaspora Voices. My coauthors are Professor Farooq Kperogi and Dr. Osmund Agbo. 

 

Published by Parresia, Dis Life No Balance contains 36 essays as well as three extensive, back-and-forth conversations by the authors on important existential questions confronting Nigeria, and is introduced by a foreword by Professor Toyin Falola, eminent historian and globally renowned man of letters.

 

The book, which will be officially released on October 1st, 2023, can be purchased at the Roving Heights bookstore in Lagos and Abuja or from https://rhbooks.com.ng/, the bookstore's website. They deliver nationwide and they have arranged to make the book available in many cities across Nigeria through their network of partner bookstores. 

 

Dis Life No Balance is also available on amazon.com as a downloadable e-copy and as a print-on-demand book. Ahead of its official release, you can preorder the book at 20 percent discount from Roving Heights bookstore.

 

In the essays, we tackle a variety of Nigerian socioeconomic, political, cultural, and human-interest topics, bringing our unique perspectives as diaspora Nigerians and as professionals in our respective fields to bear on a wide range of Nigerian, African, and global issues.

 

Nigeria takes center stage in the reflections, analyses, and discussions contained in the book. The essays constitute our intervention on issues affecting Nigeria and connecting her to a fast-changing world of competition and opportunities. The essays are also our way of thinking of home from abroad, and of expressing both the anxieties of exile and the discursive freedoms that distance from home confers.

 

Some topics covered in the essays are:

 

Restructuring

Japa

Electoral Reform

Ethnicity

Corruption

Patriotism

Nigerian Onomastics

Federal character

ASUU and University Education

 

Here are some advance reviews of the book:

 

OKEY NDIBE: In their thematic breadth, analytic rigor, sweeping command of facts Nigeriana and global, and stylistic vitality and wit, Farooq Kperogi, Moses Ochonu and Osmund Agbo stand out as three of Nigeria's most compelling, fearless and principled commentators and pundits. In Dis Life No Balance, the trio have pooled their respective gifts into a rich, riveting smorgasbord. Here's a harvest of illuminating insights, provocative reflections and alluringly irreverent takes on some of the major social, cultural and political debates in Nigeria, Africa and the world. I emerged from the book giddy and transformed. Do yourself a favor – read it!

 

KINGSLEY MOGHALU: A riveting book that illuminates Nigeria's contemporary politics, society and history. The authors, professionally accomplished Nigerians in the Diaspora, write from the combined perspective of looking in from the outside and looking out from the inside as homegrown Nigerians. Dis Life No Balance is a rare gift, a must-read for anyone who wants to understand contemporary Nigeria and trends in the wider world that hold lessons for the largest country of the black race.

 

KADARIA AHMED: Dis Life No Balance is a provocative and sometimes uncomfortable read by the trio of Kperogi, Ochonu and Agbo who examined the complications that bedevil Nigeria today with a brutal honesty that is often only made possible by distance and even absence. This book is a must read for those who seek authentic informed commentary on the many dysfunctions of Nigeria but who also want to understand the deep pull the country has on her people and why even those who have left continue to engage with, fight for and live in hope for her future.


71grSsIhu9L._AC_UY436_QL65_.jpg






 

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On Fri, Sep 29, 2023, 6:32 AM Oluwatoyin Adepoju <ovde...@gmail.com> wrote:
Magnificent.

Publishing strategy is also striking in demonstrating Nigerian immigrant scholars in the Western academy publishing in Nigeria and working with a Nigeria based bookseller to distribute widely in Nigeria at well as making the book available to the international market through Amazon.

Both book title and choice of publisher are instructively similar to those of Pius Adesanmi's Naija No Dey Carry Last, a particularly successful North American academic whose greatest visibility might have been through his online activity and who also published a pidgin English titled book in Nigeria, I think, which perhaps collected some of his online essays.

The choice of a publisher in Nigeria as well as using a Nigerian bookseller as a primary selling point in Nigeria has enabled the seeling in price in Nigeria to be lower, along with using flexible payment options represented by various installmental payment plans, an ingenious approach initself, within a canny distribution strategy.

Ken's observation comparing his own latest book with this one is striking inspiring reflection.

Responding to Ken's observation, one must note, however, the broader spectrum of issues involved in relation to book publication, particularly by academics, scholars working in higher education, such as Moses and Farooq and ex-academics, such as Ken, particularly in Western academia.

What factors influence how people in such demographics publish their work?

If this book were to be what is conventionally understood as a scholarly text instead of a more general interest set of reflections would the authors be likely to publish with the publisher they used?

A trade publisher and one in Lagos?

There are so many issues involved.

It would be great to find a way in which academics in the West can publish with those Western publishers they conventionally publish with, such pro-academic publishers as university presses, eg Cambridge, Harvard, Oxford etc and others such as Routledge and Bloomsbury Academic, if I recall the name correctly, all these being publishers whose print prices are often not cheap, even in terms of Western currencies, and whose Africa penetration is often weak, as well as publish with other kinds of publishers in other places

I understand, and wish to be educated if the facts are different, that academics in Western institutions need to publish with publishers with a strong record of scholarly publishing if their work is carry weight in their institutional contexts and the most recognized of such publishers by the Western academy are in the West.

These are different from trade publishers although Bloomsbury, famous for publishing J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series, make themselves an exception through their scholarly arm, Bloomsbury Academic. 

These considerations may have influenced the fact that all Moses' sole authored books I can find on Amazon, except one, and his edited book on African entrepreneurship, conventional scholarly texts, are published by Indiana University Press, one of the strongest in African Studies, even though they have many other interests.

His other sole authored book, a collection of essays, is published by Kwasi Konadu's Diasporic Africa Press, another scholarly publisher, with a rising profile.

I get the impression, though, that Moses' scholarly credentials are likely defined by the books published by Indiana on account of being books developing a sustained argument across the expansive range of a text of a particular length, as well as by his publications in scholarly journals.

I get the impression that sole authored books of such scope are understood in the Western academy as vital in demonstrating a scholar's capacity.

I understand essay collections are also valued but not as much as books, except in rare cases, as with those of Abiola Irele,  who made his name through essays and one book well before his entry into the Western academy, and in even rarer cases,  scholars who do not even collect their essays into books but are recognized as strategic figures in their fields,  such as Oxford Hinduism prof emeritus Alexis Sanderson, who wrote no book nor even put his essays together into a book, as far as I know, but the exceptional character of those essays being evident even to a person with a basic acquaintance in the field.

It just occured to me that I could  approach Sanderson to organize his essays into a book, and sell through print on demand on Amazon, and after making enough profit, plough some of it into print publishing.

It would be interesting to and compare the publishing careers of Farooq, Pius Adesanmi and Moses Ochonu as Diaspora Nigerian scholars in the Western academy who are also keenly engaged with Nigeria and Africa, particularly through social media, and that of Toyin Falola, a scholar in the same demographic, whose social media activity is different and possibly with those of such Diaspora and/or ex Diaspora scholars who are not Nigerian,  and with diaspora African academics who are not based in the West.

What is the significance of the publishing histories of these scholars in terms of institutionally shaped and individually driven publishing decisions at various stages of an academic's career, in relation to the scholar's social origins- diaspora or native- and institutional placement?

Such a mapping feeds into the question of expectations for audience interest and of how to address audiences in the writing process and in publishing 

Which audiences are likely to be reached by Moses and Farooq's conventional scholarly texts as different from those more likely to be reached by this new books of theirs and their social  media activity which this book is likely to be closer to?

Who are those likely to be reached by Falola's book on Farooq, a scholar who is perhaps most visible as a public intellectual in his online activity even as he functions effectively as a US academy scholar?

How do choice of publishers shape these issues?

How much would the answers change if the publishers of all these books are also based in Nigeria and perhaps distribute beyond Nigeria?

Falola has published one or perhaps both of his autobiographies with Bookcraft in Nigeria. What are the implications of that in comparison with almost all his other books, published in the West and his relatively recent distribution of his publishing choices among some of the more prestigous Western publishers, such as Cambridge,  Bloomsbury Academic and perhaps Routledge, if I recall correctly?

On another note, I suspect that a strategic frontier for the scholarly text market is social media, particularly in countries like Nigeria, where smartphone penetration is high and social media is vibrant within a weak library and bookshop culture.

Thanks

Toyin


On Fri, Sep 29, 2023, 12:23 AM Harrow, Kenneth <har...@msu.edu> wrote:
What a wonderful accomplishment!! I congratulate you also on your platform of distribution which is so important. I felt helpless before my publisher when informed how my books were to be priced and distributed. Let your new volume be a model for us all to try to emulate. The essays and topics look compelling and highly significant. Mabruk! Congrats guys, great work.
Ken

From: usaafric...@googlegroups.com <usaafric...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Moses Ebe Ochonu <meoc...@gmail.com>
Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2023 3:53:16 PM
To: USAAfricaDialogue <USAAfric...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Announcing the Publication of Dis Life No Balance
 


I am thrilled to announce the publication of our new book of essays titled Dis Life No Balance: An Anthology of Nigerian Diaspora Voices. My coauthors are Professor Farooq Kperogi and Dr. Osmund Agbo. 

 

Published by Parresia, Dis Life No Balance contains 36 essays as well as three extensive, back-and-forth conversations by the authors on important existential questions confronting Nigeria, and is introduced by a foreword by Professor Toyin Falola, eminent historian and globally renowned man of letters.

 

The book, which will be officially released on October 1st, 2023, can be purchased at the Roving Heights bookstore in Lagos and Abuja or from https://rhbooks.com.ng/, the bookstore's website. They deliver nationwide and they have arranged to make the book available in many cities across Nigeria through their network of partner bookstores. 

 

Dis Life No Balance is also available on amazon.com as a downloadable e-copy and as a print-on-demand book. Ahead of its official release, you can preorder the book at 20 percent discount from Roving Heights bookstore.

 

In the essays, we tackle a variety of Nigerian socioeconomic, political, cultural, and human-interest topics, bringing our unique perspectives as diaspora Nigerians and as professionals in our respective fields to bear on a wide range of Nigerian, African, and global issues.

 

Nigeria takes center stage in the reflections, analyses, and discussions contained in the book. The essays constitute our intervention on issues affecting Nigeria and connecting her to a fast-changing world of competition and opportunities. The essays are also our way of thinking of home from abroad, and of expressing both the anxieties of exile and the discursive freedoms that distance from home confers.

 

Some topics covered in the essays are:

 

Restructuring

Japa

Electoral Reform

Ethnicity

Corruption

Patriotism

Nigerian Onomastics

Federal character

ASUU and University Education

 

Here are some advance reviews of the book:

 

OKEY NDIBE: In their thematic breadth, analytic rigor, sweeping command of facts Nigeriana and global, and stylistic vitality and wit, Farooq Kperogi, Moses Ochonu and Osmund Agbo stand out as three of Nigeria's most compelling, fearless and principled commentators and pundits. In Dis Life No Balance, the trio have pooled their respective gifts into a rich, riveting smorgasbord. Here's a harvest of illuminating insights, provocative reflections and alluringly irreverent takes on some of the major social, cultural and political debates in Nigeria, Africa and the world. I emerged from the book giddy and transformed. Do yourself a favor – read it!

 

KINGSLEY MOGHALU: A riveting book that illuminates Nigeria's contemporary politics, society and history. The authors, professionally accomplished Nigerians in the Diaspora, write from the combined perspective of looking in from the outside and looking out from the inside as homegrown Nigerians. Dis Life No Balance is a rare gift, a must-read for anyone who wants to understand contemporary Nigeria and trends in the wider world that hold lessons for the largest country of the black race.

 

KADARIA AHMED: Dis Life No Balance is a provocative and sometimes uncomfortable read by the trio of Kperogi, Ochonu and Agbo who examined the complications that bedevil Nigeria today with a brutal honesty that is often only made possible by distance and even absence. This book is a must read for those who seek authentic informed commentary on the many dysfunctions of Nigeria but who also want to understand the deep pull the country has on her people and why even those who have left continue to engage with, fight for and live in hope for her future.


71grSsIhu9L._AC_UY436_QL65_.jpg






 

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