The Nature of Copyright
download cover image ►

The Nature of Copyright

A Law of Users' Rights

Title Details

Pages: 296

Trim size: 5.500in x 8.500in

Formats

Paperback

Pub Date: 11/01/1991

ISBN: 9-780-8203-1362-7

List Price: $34.95

The Nature of Copyright

A Law of Users' Rights

Skip to

  • Description
  • Reviews

This forthright and provocative book offers a new perspective on copyright law and the legal rights of individuals to use copyrighted materials. Most Americans believe that the primary purpose of copyright is to protect authors against the theft of their property. They are wrong, say L. Ray Patterson and Stanley W. Lindberg. Guaranteeing certain rights to authors (and to the entrepreneurs who publish and market their creations) is only an incidental function of copyright; it exists ultimately for the public’s benefit. The constitutionally ordained purpose of copyright, the authors remind us, is to promote the public welfare by the advancement of knowledge. In The Nature of Copyright they present an extended analysis of the fair-use doctrine and articulate a new concept that they demonstrate is implicit in copyright law: the rule of personal use.

Viewing copyright in a historical context, Patterson and Lindberg show how its original purposes—to prevent both the monopoly of the book trade and the official censorship of writings—have been lost largely as a result of uninformed jurisprudence. Contributing to the problem have been special-interest groups that have circulated official-looking but misleading copyright “guidelines” for copyright users, librarians, and others. According to the authors, the claims in these intimidating guidelines, such as copying restrictions based on specific word counts, are not legally binding and indeed are often groundless. If the current trend to give publishers and other vested interests even wider protection under copyright continues, warn Patterson and Lindberg, knowledge could become a private commodity to which access is tightly controlled.

The authors also address the effect of recent court rulings in such cases as [J.D.] Salinger v. Random House, Inc., and New Era Pub. Int. v. Henry Holt & Co. (the L. Ron Hubbard biography case). Severely hampering the work of biogra

Will cause the reader to look at copyright in a new light. Even those who ultimately reject the authors' theories will be left with a more complete picture of the development of copyright law and alternatives to the assumptions commonly made.

—Lydia Pallas Loren, Michigan Law Review

About the Author/Editor

L. Ray Patterson (Author)
L. RAY PATTERSON (1929–2003) was a widely consulted and cited authority on copyright law and history. He was the Pope F. Brock Professor of Professional Responsibility at the University of Georgia School of Law, and a former Dean of the Emory University Law School. The American Library Association's L. Ray Patterson Copyright Award was established in his honor, and first given out in 2005.

Stanley W. Lindberg (Author)
STANLEY W. LINDBERG (1939–2000) served as editor of the Georgia Review from 1977 until his death. He is credited with transforming the magazine from a regional quarterly into the publication that now regularly attracts work by some of the literary world's most renowned figures and most promising newcomers. Among his many honors, Lindberg received the first Governor's Award in the Humanities in 1986.