Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 INTRODUCTION
- 2 PETITIONS AND COPYRIGHT
- 3 CRITICS IN PARLIAMENT
- 4 CRITICS IN THE BOOK TRADE I: PRINT WORKERS AND THEIR ALLIES
- 5 CRITICS IN THE BOOK TRADE II: PUBLISHING AND PUBLISHERS
- 6 THE CAMPAIGN IN THE DAILY PRESS
- 7 AUTHORS AND THE BEGINNINGS OF AUTHORS' ORGANISATIONS
- 8 THE MAKING OF THE CASE FOR THE BILL
- 9 CONCLUSION
- Appendix I Chronology of the bills
- Appendix II Successive versions of the bill
- Appendix III The Copyright Act 1842
- Bibliography
- Index
9 - CONCLUSION
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 INTRODUCTION
- 2 PETITIONS AND COPYRIGHT
- 3 CRITICS IN PARLIAMENT
- 4 CRITICS IN THE BOOK TRADE I: PRINT WORKERS AND THEIR ALLIES
- 5 CRITICS IN THE BOOK TRADE II: PUBLISHING AND PUBLISHERS
- 6 THE CAMPAIGN IN THE DAILY PRESS
- 7 AUTHORS AND THE BEGINNINGS OF AUTHORS' ORGANISATIONS
- 8 THE MAKING OF THE CASE FOR THE BILL
- 9 CONCLUSION
- Appendix I Chronology of the bills
- Appendix II Successive versions of the bill
- Appendix III The Copyright Act 1842
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Although Archibald Alison considered it ‘a disgrace to British legislation’, legal commentators throughout the nineteenth century responded warmly and positively to the 1842 Copyright Act. Godson's Practical treatise had devoted considerable space to the exposition of Talfourd's proposals, as yet unpassed. The 1844 supplement to this declared the law respecting copyright in books to be ‘much improved’ since the last edition, ‘by acts of Parliament, for which the public owe great thanks, as to copyright, to Mr Serjeant Talfourd’. Burke, who provided a further supplement to Godson's textbook in 1851, was still entirely supportive of Talfourd, to whom the public owed ‘the happy amelioration of our Copyright law’. Another near-contemporary, Blaine, writing in 1853, described how the Statute of Anne ‘cut down’ the perpetual right in literary works to a short fourteen-year term, and noted that ‘since that time instalments of justice have with the greatest difficulty been wrung from the Legislature’. A footnote attributed the 1842 Act to ‘the generous and unwearied exertions of one of the most distinguished authors of modern times, Sir Thomas Noon Talfourd’.
In the 1870 first edition of Copinger, now a standard work, it was emphasised that the contemporary law of literary copyright depended on the 1842 Act. Again Talfourd's contribution is recognised: ‘To Mr Serjeant Talfourd is due the honour of obtaining this piece of legislative justice.’ Later commentators likewise emphasised the continuing reliance on the 1842 Act.
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- Literary Copyright Reform in Early Victorian EnglandThe Framing of the 1842 Copyright Act, pp. 210 - 218Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
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