Today, copyright is everywhere, surrounded by a thicket of no trespassing signs that mark creative work as private property. Caren Irr’s Pink Pirates asks how contemporary novelists—represented by Ursula Le Guin, Andrea Barrett, Kathy Acker, and Leslie Marmon Silko—have read those signs, arguing that for feminist writers in particular copyright often conjures up the persistent exclusion of women from ownership. Bringing together voices from law schools, courtrooms, and the writer's desk, Irr shows how some of the most inventive contemporary feminist novelists have reacted to this history. Explaining the complex, three-century lineage of Anglo-American copyright law in clear, accessible terms and wrestling with some of copyright law's most deeply rooted assumptions, Irr sets the stage for a feminist reappraisal of the figure of the literary pirate in the late twentieth century—a figure outside the restrictive bounds of U.S. copyright statutes. Going beyond her readings of contemporary women authors, Irr’s exhaustive history of how women have fared under intellectual property regimes speaks to broader political, social, and economic implications and engages digital-era excitement about the commons with the most utopian and materialist strains in feminist criticism.
Author(s): Caren Irr
Publisher: University Of Iowa Press
Year: 2010
Language: English
Commentary: feminism is fascism
Pages: 232
Tags: American Fiction: Women Authors: History And Criticism, American Fiction: 20th Century: History And Criticism, Intellectual Property In Literature, Piracy (Copyright): United States: History: 20th Century, Law And Literature: United States: History: 20th Century, Feminism And Literature: United States: History: 20th Century
Contents......Page 8
Acknowledgments......Page 10
Introduction: The Problem of Copyright......Page 14
1. A Feminist History of Copyright: 1710 to 2010......Page 30
2. The Maternal Commons: Reyher, Kroeber, and Le Guin......Page 68
3. Appropriating Inuit Fashions: From Donna Karan to the Scientific Fictions of Andrea Barrett......Page 90
4. Obscenity versus Freedom of Speech: The Outside of Ownership in Kathy Acker's Pussy, King of the Pirates......Page 118
5. Transracial Parody: 2 Live Crew Meets Leslie Marmon Silko......Page 146
Conclusion: Toward a Pink Commons......Page 172
Notes......Page 180
Bibliography......Page 208
Index......Page 228