小说作为社会讽刺:60年后,风尽逝,合理使用的局限性

D. Thampapillai
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摘要

在澳美自由贸易协定(FTA)之后,澳大利亚版权法中合理使用原则的缺失一直是澳大利亚争论的焦点。随着澳大利亚政府在自由贸易协定之后对1968年版权法(Cth)进行改革,它回避了采用合理使用的选择。相反,澳大利亚选择将一个版本的合理使用纳入其现有的公平交易框架。因此,《2006年版权修正案》(Cth)在《版权法》中插入了第41A条和第103AA条。这些条款规定,公平处理受版权保护的作品,如果是为了恶搞或讽刺的目的,则不构成侵权。这些条款编纂了美国最高法院在坎贝尔诉阿卡夫玫瑰音乐一案中的部分判决。然而,这些新条款的参数尚未得到探讨,公平交易法学的稀疏性质意味着这些条款的真正含义尚不清楚。此外,来自美国的两个案例,太阳信托银行诉霍顿米夫林和塞林格诉科尔廷,强调了制定法律规则保护文学“重写”的重要性。这两个案例都涉及到作者用一部原创小说来“回复”原作者和更广泛的文化。“写回”或“重写”在文学中有坚实的基础。它为我们的文化增添了无价的东西。关键的问题是,我们的法律环境是否允许它蓬勃发展。本文探讨了合理使用与文学改写之间的相互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The novel as social satire: 60 years later, the wind done gone and the limitations of fair use
The absence of the doctrine of fair use from Australian copyright law has been a bone of contention in Australia after the Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement (FTA). As the Australian government reformed the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth) in the aftermath of the FTA it eschewed the option of adopting fair use. Instead, Australia chose to incorporate a version of fair use into its existing fair dealing framework. Accordingly, the Copyright Amendment Act 2006 (Cth) inserted ss 41A and 103AA into the Copyright Act. These provisions provide that a fair dealing with a copyright protected work does not constitute an infringement if it is done for the purposes of parody or satire. These provisions codify part of the ratio of the United States Supreme Court in the seminal case of Campbell v Acuff Rose Music. However, the parameters of these new provisions are unexplored and the sparse nature of fair dealing jurisprudence means that the true meaning of the provisions is unclear. Moreover, two cases from the United States, SunTrust Bank v Houghton Mifflin and Salinger v Colting, underline just how important it is to have legal rules that protect literary ‘re-writes’. Both cases involved authors using an original novel to ‘write back’ to the original author and the broader culture. ‘Writing back’ or the ‘re-write’ has a firm basis in literature. It adds something invaluable to our culture. The key question is whether our legal landscape can allow it to flourish. This paper examines the interaction between fair use and literary re-writes.
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