1st Edition

The State of Copyright The complex relationships of cultural creation in a globalized world

By Debora Halbert Copyright 2014
    284 Pages
    by Routledge

    282 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book seeks to make an intervention into the ongoing debate about the scope and intensity of global copyright laws.

    While mapping out the primary actors in the context of globalization and the modern political economy of information ownership, the argument is made that alternatives to further expansion of copyright are necessary. By examining the multiple and competing interests in creating the legal regime of copyright law, this books attempts to map the political economy of copyright in the information age, critique the concentration of ownership that is intrinsic in the status quo, and provide an assessment of the state of the contemporary global copyright landscape and its futures. It draws upon the current narratives of copyright as produced by corporate, government, and political actors and frames these narratives as language games within a global political project to define how information and culture will be shared and exchanged in the future. The text problematizes the relationship of the state to culture, comments on the global flows of culture, and critiques the regulatory apparatus that is in place to commodify culture and align it with the contemporary nation-state. In the end, the possibility of non-commodified and more open futures are explored.  

    The State of Copyright will be of particular interest for students and scholars of international political economy, law, political science, anthropology, sociology, cultural studies, library sciences, and communication studies. It also will appeal to a growing popular audience that has taken an interest in the issues of copyright.

    Part One: Copyright and the State  1. Introduction   2. The State of Property: Seeking Stable Terrain for Intellectual Property  3. Piracy  4. Property and the State: Exporting Authenticity and The Territories of National Cultures  Part Two: Culture and the State  5. Exporting Authenticity and the Hybridity of Culture: Or, who’s a pirate anyway?  6. Critical Copyright, Cultural Flows, Traditional Knowledge and the Future  Part Three: The Future  7. Mass Culture and the Culture of the Masses: A Manifesto for User-Generated Rights  8. Skipping through the Desert of the Real: Copyright Landscapes and the Future of Creativity

    Biography

    Debora Halbert is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Hawai`i at Manoa. She is the author of Intellectual Property in the Information Age: The Politics of Expanding Ownership Rights and Resisting Intellectual Property, along with numerous articles on issues related to intellectual property.