Authors and Owners: The Invention of CopyrightHarvard University Press, 1993 - 176 Seiten The notion of the author as the creator and therefore the first owner of a work is deeply rooted both in our economic system and in our concept of the individual. But this concept of authorship is modern. Mark Rose traces the formation of copyright in eighteenth-century Britain—and in the process highlights still current issues of intellectual property. Authors and Owners is at once a fascinating look at an important episode in legal history and a significant contribution to literary and cultural history. |
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Seite 79
... Yates from the anti - common - law position he had taken before the bar in Tonson v . Collins . Yates gracefully apologized for the " singularity " of his opinion and expressed his regret at his " misfortune " in finding himself alone ...
... Yates from the anti - common - law position he had taken before the bar in Tonson v . Collins . Yates gracefully apologized for the " singularity " of his opinion and expressed his regret at his " misfortune " in finding himself alone ...
Seite 128
... Yates protested in his opinion in Millar v . Taylor , a set of ideas which have no bounds or marks whatever , nothing that is capable of a visible possession , nothing that can sustain any one of the qualities or incidents of property ...
... Yates protested in his opinion in Millar v . Taylor , a set of ideas which have no bounds or marks whatever , nothing that is capable of a visible possession , nothing that can sustain any one of the qualities or incidents of property ...
Seite 138
... Yates asked in Tonson v . Collins ( 1760 ) . " Some few may be known by their style ; but the generality are not known at all " ( ER 96 : 185 ) . Yates's challenge to the discourse of proprietary authorship was fundamental . Can one ...
... Yates asked in Tonson v . Collins ( 1760 ) . " Some few may be known by their style ; but the generality are not known at all " ( ER 96 : 185 ) . Yates's challenge to the discourse of proprietary authorship was fundamental . Can one ...
Inhalt
The Question of Literary Property | 1 |
The Regime of Regulation | 9 |
Making Copyright | 31 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
appeal Areopagitica argued argument assertion author's common-law right author's property author's right authorship Becket bill Blackstone book trade Burnet Camden's censorship century Chancery claim Collins common concept concerned copy copyright law copyright term Court of Session cultural production Curll defendant Defoe discourse Doctor Swift Donaldson edition Edmund Curll eighteenth eighteenth-century England English granted guild Hardwicke Hargrave hath House of Lords ideas immaterial individual injunction invention issue James Burrow judges Justice King's Bench Kinkaid labor learning letters limited literary composition literary property literary-property question London booksellers Lord Chancellor Lord Mansfield M. H. Abrams manuscript matter metaphor Millar Milton monopoly Nares nature notion object opinion orator pamphlet Parliament patent peers perpetual copyright person petition plaintiff poem Pope Pope's printers property rights proprietor protection publication regulation reported representation reprinting Scottish Shakespeare Stationers Statute of Anne statutory Tatler Taylor tion Tonson vote William Blackstone Woodfall writing Yates