Putting Intellectual Property in its Place: Rights Discourses, Creative Labor, and the Everyday

Laura J. Murray (Associate Professor, Department of English, Associate Professor, Department of English, Queen's University, Canada),S. Tina Piper (Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, McGill University),Kirsty Robertson (Assistant Professor, Department of Visual Arts, Assistant Professor, Department of Visual Arts, University of Western Ontario)

Putting Intellectual Property in its Place: Rights Discourses, Creative Labor, and the Everyday
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc
Country
United States
Published
10 April 2014
Pages
224
ISBN
9780199336265

Putting Intellectual Property in its Place: Rights Discourses, Creative Labor, and the Everyday

Laura J. Murray (Associate Professor, Department of English, Associate Professor, Department of English, Queen's University, Canada),S. Tina Piper (Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, McGill University),Kirsty Robertson (Assistant Professor, Department of Visual Arts, Assistant Professor, Department of Visual Arts, University of Western Ontario)

Putting Intellectual Property in its Place examines the relationship between creativity and intellectual property law on the premise that, despite concentrated critical attention devoted to IP law from academic, policy and activist quarters, its role as a determinant of creative activity is overstated. The effects of IP rights or law are usually more unpredictable, non-linear, or illusory than is often presumed. Through a series of case studies focusing on nineteenth century journalism, fake art, plant hormone research between the wars, online knitting communities, creativity in small cities, and legal practice, the authors discuss the many ways people comprehend the law through information and opinions gathered from friends, strangers, coworkers, and the media. They also show how people choose to share, create, negotiate, and dispute based on what seems fair, just, or necessary, in the context of how their community functions in that moment, while ignoring or reimagining legal mechanisms. In this book authors Murray, Piper, and Robertson define the everyday life of IP law , constituting an experiment in non-normative legal scholarship, and in building theory from material and located practice.

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