Back to Homepage

Intellectual Property Bibliography

*****Additional bibliographic suggestions are gratefully accepted by email. Email me

__________________________________________________________________

Bakhtin, Mikhail.  “From The Problem with Speech Genres.”  The Rhetorical Tradition:

Readings from Classical Times to the Present.  Eds. Patricia Bizzell and Bruce

Herzberg.  Boston: Bedford, 1990.  944-963.

Barthes, Roland.  “Death of the Author.”  Image, Music, Text.  Trans. Stephan Heath. 

New York: Hill and Wang, 1977.  142-148.

Benkler, Yochai.  “The Battle Over the Institutional Ecosystem in the Digital

Environment.”  Communications of the ACM 44.2  (2001): 84-90.

Benkler, Yochai.  “From Consumers to Users: Shifting the Deeper Structures of

Regulation Toward a Sustainable Commons and User Access.”  Federal

Communications Law Journal 52 (2000): 561-579.

Benkler, Yochai.  “Property, Commons, and the First Amendment: Towards a Core

Common Infrastructure.”  March 2001. White Paper for the First Amendment

Program, Brennan Center for Justice ant NYU School of Law.   11 Nov. 2002

<http://www.law.nyu.edu/benklery/WhitePaper.pdf>.

Bettig, Ronald V.  Copyrighting Culture: The Political Economy of Intellectual Property. 

Boulder: Westview, 1996.

Coombe, Rosemary J.  The Cultural Life of Intellectual Properties: Authorship,

Appropriation and the Law. Durham: Duke UP, 1998.

“Digital Millenium Copyright Act of 1998: U.S. Copyright Office Summary.” 

Washington, GPO, 1998.

Feather, John.  “From Rights in Copies to Copyrights: The Recognition of Authors:

Rights in English Law and Practice in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries.” 

The Construction of Authorship: Textual Appropriation in Law and Literature.  Durham:

Duke UP, 1999.  191-209.

Foucault, Michel.  “What is an Author?”  Language, Counter-Memory, Practice.  Trans.

Donald F. Bouchard.  Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1977.  114-138.

Jaszi, Peter.  “On the Author Effect: Contemporary Copyright And Collective

Creativity.”  The Construction of Authorship: Textual Appropriation in Law and

Literature.  Durham: Duke UP, 1994.  29-56.

Lessig, Lawrence.  The Future of Ideas: the Fate of the Commons in a Connected World

New York: Random House, 2001.

Litman, Jessica.  Digital Copyright.  Amherst: Prometheus, 2001.

Livingston-Webber, Joan.  “Gen X Occupies the Cultural Commons: Ethical Practices

and Perceptions of Fair Use.”  Perspectives on Plagiarism: and Intellectual

Property in a Postmodern World.  Eds. Lise Buranen and Alice M. Roy.  Albany: 

State U of New York P, 1999.  263-272.

Lunsford, Andrea Abernathy.  “Rhetoric, Feminism, and the Politics of Textual

Ownership.”  College English 61.5 (1999): 529-544.

Lunsford, Andrea A. and Susan West.  “Intellectual Property and Composition Studies.” 

College Composition and Communication 47.3 (1996): 383-411.

Rose, Mark.  Authors and Owners: The Invention of Copyright.   Cambridge: Harvard

UP, 1993.

“Security Researchers Drop Scientific Censorship Case.”  Electronic Frontier

Foundation. (6 Feb. 2002). <http//:www.eff.org/IPO/DMCA/Felton v. RIAA/

20020206_eff_felten_pr.html> (14 September 2002)>.

Stearns, Laurie.  “Copy Wrong:  Plagiarism, Process, Property, and the Law.” 

Perspectives on Plagiarism: and Intellectual Property in a Postmodern World. 

Eds.  Lise Buranen and Alice M. Roy.  Albany: State U of New York P, 1999.  5-17.

Trimbur, John.  “Agency and the Death of the Author: A Partial Defense of Modernism.” 

JAC 20.2 (2000): 283-298.

United StatesU.S. Copyright Office.  “Copyright Office Summary.”  The Digital

Millennium Copyright Act of 1998.  Washington: GPO, 1998.

United StatesU.S. Copyright Office.  “Title 17: Appendix V: Additional Provisions of

the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.” Copyright Law of the United States.  

Washington: GPO, 1998.

Valauskas, Charles C. and Catherine Innes.  Copyright Protection of Software,

Multimedia, and Other Works: An Author’s Guide.  AUTM 4.  Norwalk: AUTM,

1999.

Woodmansee, Martha.  “On the Author Effect: Recovering Collectivity.”  The

Construction of Authorship: Textual Appropriation in Law and Literature. 

Durham: Duke, 1994.  15-28.

Back to Top