Tag Archives: writing

THE COPYRIGHT ADVENTURES OF MARK TWAIN

When Samuel Clemens, better known by his pen name Mark Twain, died in 1910, the New York Times deemed him the greatest humorist and satirist in the English-speaking world.  William Faulkner later went beyond that accolade, and called him “the father of American literature.”

There is another lesser known area in which superlatives are due. He was the most fervid and imaginative champion of copyright law this country has ever produced.

In his magisterial  biography, Ron Chernow characterizes Twain’s attitude toward copyright law as “militant.” Chernow likes the adjective so much that he uses it three times.  And it is proper to do so. For while all writers wish to maximize their copyright protection, none have been as combative as Twain in attempting to stretch the boundaries of that legal doctrine.

For most of his life, his attempts failed. But he never gave up. In the end, he succeeded.

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DWARFS AT LARGE

The first thing one notices are the eyes. They peer at the viewer with an audacity bordering on insolence. They say plainly that the soul behind those eyes is the equal of any viewer. In fact, in their somewhat intolerant way, they suggest that he may be the viewer’s superior.

Only when the viewer backs up and sees the portrait in whole, does he notice that Sebastián de Morra, the artist’s subject, is a dwarf.

Sebastián de Morra, Museo del Prado

Dwarfs, or “little persons” as some prefer to be called, were in the news last year, thanks to the controversy over Disney’s Snow White. Actor Peter Dinklage, who has a form of dwarfism called achondroplasia, denounced Disney for its plans to make “that fucking backward story of seven dwarves living in the cave.” Immediately following his criticism, a number of high profile writers and activists piled on, supporting his outrage.

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