
Jeremy L. answered 06/30/19
Patient and Experienced Tutor in Economics, History, and Writing
Likening the editor to a producer may be a stretch in many cases, but not necessarily. More to the point, however, is that your understanding of the editor's function appears unduly restrictive. The kind of tasks you associate with editing are more accurately characterized as proofreading, which generally concerns the evaluation of grammar, syntax, and diction. Editing, however, involves a wider range of discretion and creativity concerning all the elements of composition. Good editors have a superior grasp of rhetoric and its various components. The editor's skills largely consist in the superior cultivation of his or her intuition concerning the relative effectiveness of alternative modes and styles of composition. In this sense the editor is very much like the producer, helping to create a more refined product from the raw material provided.