Just two months from now, much of the world will celebrate another Public Domain Day, welcoming a year’s worth of works into the public domain. Many countries that have had life+70 years copyright terms for a while will get works by authors who died in 1954. Those still fortunate enough to still have life+50 years terms will get works by authors who died in 1974. The rules in the United States are more complicated, but we’ll have nearly all our remaining copyrights from 1929 expire. That means that, for us, essentially all of the publication history of the “roaring 20s” will be public domain when the new year arrives.1 That’s a wide sweep of culture available for everyone to enjoy, share, build on, and reuse.
The Twenties encompass the start of national women’s suffrage, the rise of the Jazz Age and the Harlem Renaissance, and the dawn of “talking” motion pictures, and extend to the “Black Tuesday” stock market crash and the beginning of the Great Depression. The Twenties had political upheaval to match the cultural and economic upheaval, including civil war in Ireland and many other places around the world, the birth of fascism in Europe, and the revival and decline of the Ku Klux Klan as waves of anti-immigrant and racist sentiment washed over much of America. But the decade also saw widespread international efforts to try to end war generally among nations. While the 1928 pact that many nations signed on to has often been viewed as a failure for not preventing World War II, it set a precedent for later international cooperation and peacekeeping efforts that can be credited with more success.
As I have in past years, I’ll be featuring a Public Domain Day countdown in the days leading up to New Year’s Day 2025, each day featuring an interesting work that will be joining the public domain then. You can follow it on this blog, or using RSS readers or social media that can connect with this blog. That includes Mastodon and other “fediverse” sites that connect with Mastodon using the ActivityPub protocol. I’ll also boost or link to the daily posts from my Mastodon account. (Most of the posts will have 500 characters or fewer, the size of a typical Mastodon post; a few may be longer.) You might also be able to follow my boosts and links from Bluesky (since my account is hooked up to Bridgy Fed), as well as possibly from Threads if they’ve enabled following Mastodon accounts. (That was on their roadmap for 2024, but I don’t know if it’s working yet.) My posts will include the hashtag #PublicDomainDayCountdown. I’ll be focusing on works joining the US public domain that are of interest to me, but you’re also welcome to post about works of interest to you joining the public domain where you are, and use the same hashtag if you like.
Right now for me, and for many others I’ve talked to, it’s hard to think much beyond next Tuesday. But I hope these posts help us anticipate some good things coming in the future, built on the knowledge and creativity of the past. May we all see and help bring about a better future in the days to come!
- The rules in the US are different for unpublished works, and for sound recordings that aren’t part of motion pictures. (I told you US copyright law was complicated.) But this January 1, along with publications from 1929, we will be welcoming sound recordings released in 1924 (which have a 100-year term) into the public domain, as well as many unpublished works by people who died in 1954. For lots more details and special cases, see Cornell University Library’s public domain table. ↩︎
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John Mark,
Thank you!can you help the Internet Archive Canada with a list of works that go PD in Canada? They recently lost to US pressure to go from life+50 to life+70, but did not have to retroactively regulate works via copyright. so I believe it is those that died in 1971 and back.Drini of the OpenLibrary project has some of the data that can help this, but having someone look it over would be most helpful. Jennifer at Duke said she was busy with the US entries.
Hello Brewster! I’m afraid that, as I understand it, Canada’s now in a 20-year public domain freeze similar to the one the US was under from 1998 until 2019, and very little will join the public domain there before 2043. (The exceptions include some government works now under Crown copyright, and some anonymous and pseudonymous works where the author is not known. Jennifer Zerkee at Simon Fraser University in Canada has a useful summary here: https://www.lib.sfu.ca/help/publish/scholarly-publishing/radical-access/changes-copyright-term-canada ) Generally speaking, works by authors who died in 1971 or earlier are public domain now in Canada, and those by authors who died in 1972 will join them in the public domain starting in 2043.
Yes, that is my understanding. So, while it will not increase each year for many many more years, it would be helpful (and fun) to celebrate those that are there now.
Looking for a list that would be good to celebrate.