Crafting Gentleness

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

The Ecstasy of Influence

(Copyright-/Intellectual property-/Appropriation-/Collage-related)

Edmund O'Reilly from the Library of Congress has just alerted me to a wonderful essay by Jonathan Lethem that was published in Harper's in February:

http://www.harpers.org/TheEcstasyOfInfluence.html

"The notion of a collage text is, of course, not original to me. Walter Benjamin's incomplete Arcades Project seemingly would have featured extensive interlaced quotations. Other precedents include Graham Rawle's novel Diary of an Amateur Photographer, its text harvested from photography magazines, and Eduardo Paolozzi's collage-novel Kex, cobbled from crime novels and newspaper clippings. Closer to home, my efforts owe a great deal to the recent essays of David Shields, in which diverse quotes are made to closely intertwine and reverberate, and to conversations with editor Sean Howe and archivist Pamela Jackson. Last year David Edelstein, in New York magazine, satirized the Kaavya Viswanathan plagiarism case by creating an almost completely plagiarized column denouncing her actions. Edelstein intended to demonstrate, through ironic example, how bricolage such as his own was ipso facto facile and unworthy. Although Viswanathan's version of “creative copying” was a pitiable one, I differ with Edelstein's conclusions" (Jonathan Lethem).

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