The Promotion of Learning in Chinese History: Discovering the Lost Soul of Modern Copyright
Shao, K. (2010) The Promotion of Learning in Chinese History: Discovering the Lost Soul of Modern Copyright. Columbia Journal of Asian Law, 24 (1). pp. 63-85.
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Abstract
This article examines for the first time the environment in which copyright was practiced in traditional China. It argues that while copyright was not an unusual practice in Chinese history, the lack of monopolistic control in China's publishing industry promoted the freedom of printing and in turn fostered education and literary creativity. In comparison, the European publishing industry in the sixteenth-eighteenth century was characterized by absolute guild monopoly. This directly, though unintentionally, molded our modern rhetoric of intellectual property, which in today's global context hinders the ultimate goal of copyright: the promotion of learning.
Item Type: | Journal Article |
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Publisher: | School of Law, Columbia University |
Copyright: | School of Law, Columbia University |
Publisher's Website: | http://cjal.columbia.edu/ |
URI: | http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/14419 |
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