There is at least one place where the law not only recognizes but expects and encourages stereotyping based on race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, gender expression, nationality, and the like (“identity traits”) - stock characters. A stock character is the archetype of a story’s character and, as such, is excluded from copyright protection, making the stock freely available for other authors to use. However, harm arises when courts agree that a stock character is comprised of an identity trait and any other characteristic, indicating that what flows naturally from that identity trait is something more than just that identity - a stereotype. In fact, identity trait stereotyping appears in the seminal stock characters case, Nichols v...
This thesis is about the cultural bargain; the balancing relationship between author monopoly and us...
Part I of this paper discusses the characteristics that make literary characters especially difficul...
LL.M. (Commercial Law)This research will consider to what extent fictional characters may be protect...
Judge Learned Hand\u27s decision in Nichols v. Universal Pictures is unquestionably seminal in the d...
Literary characters are protected within the copyright of the original work in which they appear, bu...
Copyright law provides writers with a way to protect their original works of authorship, but courts ...
Fictional characters are the backbone of the multi-billion dollar entertainment industry. Since the ...
Enormous amounts of new content are posted on social media every day. Ordinarily, if a work is origi...
This Comment defines what qualifies as a character and what makes the character eligible or ineligib...
Copyright law protects expressions of ideas, but not the idea itself. Legal disputes over characters...
Porchlight Music Theatre, a non-equity theatre company in Chicago, decided to capitalize on the popu...
What do pictures want? Echoing the famous question posed by art historian W.J.T. Mitchell, this arti...
Videogame technology has reached the point where characters can accurately mimic real-life individua...
The appropriation of an individual\u27s name or likeness without that individual\u27s consent subjec...
Both trademark and unfair competition laws and state right of publicity laws protect against unautho...
This thesis is about the cultural bargain; the balancing relationship between author monopoly and us...
Part I of this paper discusses the characteristics that make literary characters especially difficul...
LL.M. (Commercial Law)This research will consider to what extent fictional characters may be protect...
Judge Learned Hand\u27s decision in Nichols v. Universal Pictures is unquestionably seminal in the d...
Literary characters are protected within the copyright of the original work in which they appear, bu...
Copyright law provides writers with a way to protect their original works of authorship, but courts ...
Fictional characters are the backbone of the multi-billion dollar entertainment industry. Since the ...
Enormous amounts of new content are posted on social media every day. Ordinarily, if a work is origi...
This Comment defines what qualifies as a character and what makes the character eligible or ineligib...
Copyright law protects expressions of ideas, but not the idea itself. Legal disputes over characters...
Porchlight Music Theatre, a non-equity theatre company in Chicago, decided to capitalize on the popu...
What do pictures want? Echoing the famous question posed by art historian W.J.T. Mitchell, this arti...
Videogame technology has reached the point where characters can accurately mimic real-life individua...
The appropriation of an individual\u27s name or likeness without that individual\u27s consent subjec...
Both trademark and unfair competition laws and state right of publicity laws protect against unautho...
This thesis is about the cultural bargain; the balancing relationship between author monopoly and us...
Part I of this paper discusses the characteristics that make literary characters especially difficul...
LL.M. (Commercial Law)This research will consider to what extent fictional characters may be protect...