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William Landay

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Bill Landay

Steichen’s WWII photographers

March 3, 2011

More on Steichen here.

Filed Under: Photography Tagged With: Edward Steichen

California, 1940

March 1, 2011

Lange - Migrant Worker 1944

Photo by Dorothea Lange. 4.11.1940.

Edison, Kern County, California. Young migratory mother, originally from Texas. On the day before the photograph was made she and her husband traveled 35 miles each way to pick peas. They worked 5 hours each and together earned $2.25. They have two young children… Live in auto camp.

National Archives (via)

Filed Under: Art, Photography Tagged With: Dorothea Lange, portraits

Pacific Ocean

February 28, 2011

Sugimoto - Pacific Ocean

Hiroshi Sugimoto, Pacific Ocean

Filed Under: Art, Photography Tagged With: seascapes

Rockefeller Center, New York

February 21, 2011

Rockefeller Center, New York City

via

Filed Under: Art Tagged With: deco, New York

Copyright Run Amok

February 21, 2011

Last week I reviewed the copy-edited manuscript of Defending Jacob, the last step before the manuscript is sent to the production department. Production will lay out the text in proper book format, a stage known as “galleys.” So copy editing is really the last chance to make changes before the book designers take over. It is about cleaning up details: grammar, typos, internal consistency (things like dates and characters’ names), and fact-checking. (Technically, you can still make changes after the book has gone to galleys, but it is more expensive. If the bill gets high enough, the standard Random House contract permits the publisher to ask the author to foot the bill himself.)

Copy editing is also the time when I make sure I have permission to use any copyrighted material that is quoted in my book. It is the author’s responsibility to secure reprint rights — and to pay for them.

In the case of Defending Jacob, there was one such quotation, which was used as an epigraph on a section title page. The quote was from H.G. Wells’s 1933 novel The Shape of Things to Come, which predicts events from 1933 through the end of the twentieth century. Here was the quote:

In 1900, a visitor from another sphere might reasonably have decided that man, as one met him in Europe or America, was a kindly, merciful and generous creature. In 1940 he might have decided, with an equal show of justice, that this creature was diabolically malignant. And yet it was the same creature, under different conditions of stress.

To use these three sentences, I had to determine, first, whether the book was still protected by copyright. If the copyright had expired, the book would be in the public domain and I could quote from it freely — freely in both senses.

No such luck. It turned out, The Shape of Things to Come was originally due to enter the public domain in the U.S. in 1989, but the copyright was extended for another 20 years in 1976 by the federal Copyright Act, then extended again for another 20 years by the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998. So The Shape of Things to Come — a book that has been out of print for years now — will not enter the public domain in the United States until 2028, 95 years after it was first published, 82 years after the author’s death. (A good summary of current copyright rules is here.)

[Read more…] about Copyright Run Amok

Filed Under: Keepers, Publishing Tagged With: copyright, Defending Jacob, H.G. Wells, Lawrence Lessig

Auden: September 1939

February 18, 2011

TNR - September 1939

Auden’s “September 1939” as it first appeared in the October 18, 1939 issue of The New Republic. (Click image to view full size. Source.)

Filed Under: Poetry Tagged With: Auden, poems, The New Republic

Penn Station, ca. 1910

February 18, 2011

Penn Station

Via

Filed Under: Photography Tagged With: history, New York, Penn Station

Quote of the Day

February 17, 2011

Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.

Albert Einstein (via)

Filed Under: Odds & Ends Tagged With: Einstein, inspiration, quotes

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