A concise, lively, and bracing exploration of an
issue bedeviling our cultural landscape-plagiarism in
literature, academia, music, art, and film-by one of our
most influential and controversial legal scholars.
Best-selling novelists J. K. Rowling and Dan Brown,
popular historians Doris Kearns Goodwin and Stephen
Ambrose, Harvard law professor Charles Ogletree, first
novelist Kaavya Viswanathan: all have rightly or wrongly
been accused of plagiarism-theft of intellectual
property-provoking widespread media punditry. But what
exactly is plagiarism? How has the meaning of this
notoriously ambiguous term changed over time as a
consequence of historical and cultural transformations?
Is the practice on the rise, or just more easily
detectable by technological advances? How does the
current market for expressive goods inform our own
understanding of plagiarism? Is there really such a
thing as ''cryptomnesia,'' the unconscious,
unintentional appropriation of another's work? What are
the mysterious motives and curious excuses of
plagiarists? What forms of punishment and absolution
does this ''sin'' elicit? What is the good in certain
types of plagiarism? Provocative, insightful, and
extraordinary for its clarity and forthrightness, ''The
Little Book of Plagiarism ''is an analytical tour de
force in small, the work of ''one of the top twenty
legal thinkers in America'' (''Legal Affairs''), a
distinguished jurist renowned for his adventuresome
intellect and daring iconoclasm. |
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