Alice Randall, an African-American woman, was ordered by a government official not to publish her criticism of the romanticization of the Old South, at least not in the words she wanted to use. The official was not one of the many in Congress and the Administration who share a romantic view of the Confederacy. It was a federal judge in Atlanta who told Randall that she could not write her critique in the words she wanted to use?a judge enforcing copyright law. Randall is the author of a book called The Wind Done Gone. In it, she tells a story that takes off from Gone with the Wind from the perspective of Scarlet O\u27Hara\u27s mulatto half-sister. In 2001, more than fifty years after Margaret Mitchell died, and years after the original copy...
In Salinger v. Random House, Inc., the Second Circuit Court of Appeals implicitly broadened the scop...
Alice Walker is a Black American novelist, essayist, short story writer, poetic, critic, biographer,...
2010 marks the 300th anniversary of the Statute of Anne, the English legislation that ushered in the...
Alice Randall, an African-American woman, was ordered by a government official not to publish her cr...
On March 16, 2001, plaintiff SunTrust Bank filed a complaint in the United States District Court for...
When after many difficulties, Alice Randall published The Wind Done Gone, the question of the very n...
"No sacrifice is too great for the Cause!"-so says Gone With the Wind's fulcrum of moral authority, ...
In some parts of the world, you can go to jail for reciting a poem in public without permission from...
Scholars have argued that the lack of international copyright frustrated the development of authorsh...
The purpose of this study has been to determine what extraliterary forces--cultural, historical, pol...
In 1853, Harriet Beecher Stowe filed a copyright suit against F. W. Thomas, a Philadelphia printer w...
A graphic novel about fair use with respect to United States copyright law. Synopsis: A documentary ...
As the copyrights on both Alice books and on the Tenniel pictures have expired, here are links to .p...
The development of the Afro-American Novel is essentially a social and human document, which deals w...
2010 marks the 300th anniversary of the Statute of Anne, the English legislation that ushered in the...
In Salinger v. Random House, Inc., the Second Circuit Court of Appeals implicitly broadened the scop...
Alice Walker is a Black American novelist, essayist, short story writer, poetic, critic, biographer,...
2010 marks the 300th anniversary of the Statute of Anne, the English legislation that ushered in the...
Alice Randall, an African-American woman, was ordered by a government official not to publish her cr...
On March 16, 2001, plaintiff SunTrust Bank filed a complaint in the United States District Court for...
When after many difficulties, Alice Randall published The Wind Done Gone, the question of the very n...
"No sacrifice is too great for the Cause!"-so says Gone With the Wind's fulcrum of moral authority, ...
In some parts of the world, you can go to jail for reciting a poem in public without permission from...
Scholars have argued that the lack of international copyright frustrated the development of authorsh...
The purpose of this study has been to determine what extraliterary forces--cultural, historical, pol...
In 1853, Harriet Beecher Stowe filed a copyright suit against F. W. Thomas, a Philadelphia printer w...
A graphic novel about fair use with respect to United States copyright law. Synopsis: A documentary ...
As the copyrights on both Alice books and on the Tenniel pictures have expired, here are links to .p...
The development of the Afro-American Novel is essentially a social and human document, which deals w...
2010 marks the 300th anniversary of the Statute of Anne, the English legislation that ushered in the...
In Salinger v. Random House, Inc., the Second Circuit Court of Appeals implicitly broadened the scop...
Alice Walker is a Black American novelist, essayist, short story writer, poetic, critic, biographer,...
2010 marks the 300th anniversary of the Statute of Anne, the English legislation that ushered in the...