One of the paradoxes of copyright history is that the Statute of Anne, which nominally recognized authors’ copyright for the first time, did not much change the day-to-day business of the Stationers who had previously enjoyed a virtual monopoly on the legal right to copy and who had also lobbied in support of the statute. This Article posits that commercial practice continued as it had because the concept of authors’ copyright had already begun to form in the contracts between authors and their publishers prior to the Statute’s enactment. These transactions, in some cases, gave authors greater rights in their work than the legal default required. Experience in the marketplace helped to assure both authors and booksellers that licensing tran...
It has long been the stated aspiration of copyright to make authors the masters of their own destiny...
Since the Statute of Anne, the hallmark of Anglo-American copyright law has been its nominal venerat...
In 1709, Jacob Tonson, the premier publisher of his age, purchased the “copyright” to Shakespeare. T...
In recent decades, various scholars have questioned the proposition that copyright must necessarily ...
The advent of statutory copyright in eighteenth-century England raised questions about ensuring acce...
The advent of statutory copyright in eighteenth-century England raised questions about ensuring acce...
Though copyright is usually categorized as a property right, efforts to justify copyright on other g...
In recent decades, various scholars have questioned the proposition that copyright must necessarily ...
The history of publication copyright and of legal intervention in the English book trade is extensiv...
What can and can’t be copied is a matter of law, but also of aesthetics, culture, and economics. The...
The chapter explores the emergence and development of copyright in England prior to 1710, with parti...
Scholars have begun to appreciate the fundamental role that contracts played in the development of c...
This article examines the historical underpinnings of copyright from the century’s old Pre Gutenbe...
Scholars have begun to appreciate the fundamental role that contracts played in the development of c...
What can and can’t be copied is a matter of law, but also of aesthetics, culture, and economics. The...
It has long been the stated aspiration of copyright to make authors the masters of their own destiny...
Since the Statute of Anne, the hallmark of Anglo-American copyright law has been its nominal venerat...
In 1709, Jacob Tonson, the premier publisher of his age, purchased the “copyright” to Shakespeare. T...
In recent decades, various scholars have questioned the proposition that copyright must necessarily ...
The advent of statutory copyright in eighteenth-century England raised questions about ensuring acce...
The advent of statutory copyright in eighteenth-century England raised questions about ensuring acce...
Though copyright is usually categorized as a property right, efforts to justify copyright on other g...
In recent decades, various scholars have questioned the proposition that copyright must necessarily ...
The history of publication copyright and of legal intervention in the English book trade is extensiv...
What can and can’t be copied is a matter of law, but also of aesthetics, culture, and economics. The...
The chapter explores the emergence and development of copyright in England prior to 1710, with parti...
Scholars have begun to appreciate the fundamental role that contracts played in the development of c...
This article examines the historical underpinnings of copyright from the century’s old Pre Gutenbe...
Scholars have begun to appreciate the fundamental role that contracts played in the development of c...
What can and can’t be copied is a matter of law, but also of aesthetics, culture, and economics. The...
It has long been the stated aspiration of copyright to make authors the masters of their own destiny...
Since the Statute of Anne, the hallmark of Anglo-American copyright law has been its nominal venerat...
In 1709, Jacob Tonson, the premier publisher of his age, purchased the “copyright” to Shakespeare. T...