[New-Poetry] Can't Cope With Copyright Infringement
JforJames at aol.com
JforJames at aol.com
Sun Dec 16 17:03:24 EST 2007
It's odd to hear a poet complain about this issue. Its the Napster
controversy come to verse.
Wendy Cope certainly had legit complaint about seeing one of her poems
attributed to Dorothy Parker.
But the complaint against anthologists reading poems at festivals seems
awfully petty. I mean the anthologist presumably got permission or paid for the
rights to reprint the poems, and thus has the right to promote the anthology
at any & all suitable venues. Besides, who attends a poetry festival to hear
an anthologist read the work of others? This would be an ancillary part of
any festival and it's not something that's used by the festival organizers to
save the cost of reading fees as Cope seems to suggest..
My question is: Do these poems floating around in cyberspace actually cause
a loss of book sales? The person who snags one off the web is the person who
in old days would have dropped by the local library and thumbed thru a few
books to find & photocopy the poem. Or stood in the bookstore aisle and copied
it out right there in full view of the manager. The person that loves the
poet's poems buys the book. Those who need a poem for this or that reason,
aren't really your book buyers. I don't think so anyway.
It did make wonder how many poets are able to live off their royalties, or
have royalties enough coming in that loss of some portion of those monies
means the difference between getting the roof fixed or having to put a bucket in
attic?
Finnegan
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