10th out of 77 books
—
14 voters
In Praise of Copying
by
Marcus Boon
This book is devoted to a deceptively simple but original argument: that copying is an essential part of being human, that the ability to copy is worthy of celebration, and that, without recognizing how integral copying is to being human, we cannot understand ourselves or the world we live in.
In spite of the laws, stigmas, and anxieties attached to it, the word "copying" p...more
In spite of the laws, stigmas, and anxieties attached to it, the word "copying" p...more
Hardcover, 285 pages
Published
October 1st 2010
by Harvard University Press
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I was initially extremely excited about this book - the propositions of the introduction are wonderful, and directly relevant to my current area of research. I had hoped to assign a chapter of this book for a class I teach on appropriation in the arts. But after wading through the first chapter without finding any clear thinking about copying, or development of any of the promising propositions of the introduction, I began to lose hope. The problem is that any potentially interesting or provocat...more
Now finally finished with this. Its major achievement was to bring mimesis into the conversation. But now I find myself thinking of other things it could have done...but didn't. Boon's argument is at once predictable and far out. Its rhythm of introducing a problematic example, analyzing it, then turning to Buddhist notions to enlarge it and view it from another perspective gets tiresome and needs to be varied. He also seems to gloss over a lot of real and substantial ideological differences whe...more
The value we place on originality is one of the great paradoxes of the modern and contemporary worlds, alongside the limits dominant ideas and ideals in our existing political cultural climates draw around legitimate forms of cooperation, appropriation, deception, transformation and combination of things into something different and perhaps new. Most of this list is not mine, but Marcus Boon’s, except the question of limiting cooperation – which is an issue that I become acutely aware of in my w...more
May 31, 2012
Sparrow
added it
A Tale of Two Cities: Marcus Boon and Copia
I'm proud of my friend Marcus for defending the indefensible -- the multiple, maddening and redundant copies produced by contemporary capitalism -- without defending capitalism itself. His argument unfolds like a series of Chinese hats, one inside the other. Quickly he locates the goddess Copia, mother of all copies. The cornucopia is her emblem: the Horn of Plenty. The only way to have lots and lots of anything -- grains of barley or Barbie dolls -- is...more
I'm proud of my friend Marcus for defending the indefensible -- the multiple, maddening and redundant copies produced by contemporary capitalism -- without defending capitalism itself. His argument unfolds like a series of Chinese hats, one inside the other. Quickly he locates the goddess Copia, mother of all copies. The cornucopia is her emblem: the Horn of Plenty. The only way to have lots and lots of anything -- grains of barley or Barbie dolls -- is...more
Marcus Boon examines copying as a whole and as various parts, though he touches on IP this book isn't so much about agreeing or disagreeing with copyright, but examining what is copying and how it is affected and how it affects. One of his main points is that copying is an aspect of humanity and even nature.
I would have liked if more attention had been paid to IP laws in this book as I feel some very good insight could have been given, but I guess without it it does fall to the readers to determ...more
I would have liked if more attention had been paid to IP laws in this book as I feel some very good insight could have been given, but I guess without it it does fall to the readers to determ...more
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