Australia has recently amended copyright laws in order to exempt and protect parodies, so that, as the Hon. Chris Ellison, the then Minster for Justice told the Senate,‘Australia’s fine tradition of poking fun at itself and others will not be unnecessarily restricted’. It is predicted that there will be legal debates about the definition of parody. But if the law, as the Minister contends, reflects Australian values, then there is a precursor question. Is there anything wrong with parody, such that it should be restricted? In their efforts to define parody, Paul Jewell and Jennie Louise discover and develop a moral defence of parody. Parody is the imitation of an artistic work, sometimes for the sake of ridicule, or perhaps as a vehicle to...
This report discusses the legal treatment of parodies in seven jurisdictions that have implemented a...
This article concerns the interpretation of the defence of fair dealing ‘for the purpose of parody o...
Criticism has long been grounds for fair use status. This comment argues that parody\u27s value, and...
This article examines the role of the recently introduced fair dealing exception for the purposes of...
The new exceptions to the Copyright Act in ss 41A and 103AA, providing protection of re-use for 'the...
© 2008 LexisNexis and authors. Published version of the paper reproduced here in accordance with the...
© 2008 LexisNexis and authors. Published version of the paper reproduced here in accordance with ...
Parody achieves its effect through a borrowing of a text which is then satirised by placing it in an...
Copyright law grants exclusive rights to right-holders which prevent others from exploiting copyrigh...
When approaching the topic of parody, questions usually arise as to the boundaries between parody an...
If contemporary media platforms transform and conflate the relations between professional and amateu...
The creation and distribution of parodies promote the fundamental values underlying the constitution...
When the cast of Saturday Night Live sang I Love Sodom to the tune of I Love New York, Elsmere M...
- The first book in English to offer an in-depth investigation into the parody exception in copyrigh...
In December 2011, the UK Intellectual Property Office commissioned the Centre for Intellectual Prope...
This report discusses the legal treatment of parodies in seven jurisdictions that have implemented a...
This article concerns the interpretation of the defence of fair dealing ‘for the purpose of parody o...
Criticism has long been grounds for fair use status. This comment argues that parody\u27s value, and...
This article examines the role of the recently introduced fair dealing exception for the purposes of...
The new exceptions to the Copyright Act in ss 41A and 103AA, providing protection of re-use for 'the...
© 2008 LexisNexis and authors. Published version of the paper reproduced here in accordance with the...
© 2008 LexisNexis and authors. Published version of the paper reproduced here in accordance with ...
Parody achieves its effect through a borrowing of a text which is then satirised by placing it in an...
Copyright law grants exclusive rights to right-holders which prevent others from exploiting copyrigh...
When approaching the topic of parody, questions usually arise as to the boundaries between parody an...
If contemporary media platforms transform and conflate the relations between professional and amateu...
The creation and distribution of parodies promote the fundamental values underlying the constitution...
When the cast of Saturday Night Live sang I Love Sodom to the tune of I Love New York, Elsmere M...
- The first book in English to offer an in-depth investigation into the parody exception in copyrigh...
In December 2011, the UK Intellectual Property Office commissioned the Centre for Intellectual Prope...
This report discusses the legal treatment of parodies in seven jurisdictions that have implemented a...
This article concerns the interpretation of the defence of fair dealing ‘for the purpose of parody o...
Criticism has long been grounds for fair use status. This comment argues that parody\u27s value, and...