Rose 1993: Difference between revisions
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text "as an action, not as a thing," for early modern period (13) | text "as an action, not as a thing," for early modern period (13) | ||
1641: abolition of Court of Star Chamber, authority behind licensing and SC's monopoly |
Revision as of 21:32, 17 November 2010
Rose, Mark. Authors and Owners: The Invention of Copyright. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1993.
The Question of Literary Property
modern authorship as "proprietorship; the author is conceived as the originator and therefor the owner of a special kind of commodity, the work" (1)
copyright: drawing lines between works, where one ends and another begins (3)
Lockean notion of property -- every man has property in his own person, and whatever he converts from state of nature -- mixed with emphasis on originality in c18 = "author as a creator who is entitled to profit from his intellectual labor" (6); landed estate (real property) forms basis for understanding literary property (7)
The Regime of Regulation
- "True copyright is concerned with rights in texts as distinct from rights in material objects, and its historical emergence is related to printing technology." (9)
printing privileges -- "exclusive rights granted by the state to individuals for limited periods of time to reward them for services or to encourage them in useful activities" (10); originate in c15 Venice; appear in England in 1518; 1517: decree revoking all existing privileges in books -- had become too unmanageable (10)
in early mdoern England, 2 parallel systems:
- patents: grants to individual authors for particular titles, but by mid-c16, mostly for classes of books (lawbooks, catechisms, etc.); base don royal prerogative
- guild system of Stationers' Company; note "copy" in register (copy as original manuscript and right to make copies of it) (12); SC derived authority from crown with royal charter of 1557 granting the guild a monopoly on printing -- interested in censorship
text "as an action, not as a thing," for early modern period (13)
1641: abolition of Court of Star Chamber, authority behind licensing and SC's monopoly