Author Archives: John Mark Ockerbloom

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About John Mark Ockerbloom

I'm a digital library strategist at the University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia.

July 4 and the power of words

The history of online books is intertwined with the history of Independence Day. It was on July 4, 1971 that Michael Hart, the founder of Project Gutenberg, was inspired to enter into a computer a copy of the Declaration of … Continue reading

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Free the sources!

I gave a lightning talk this past Sunday when Mary and I attended Wikipedia Day at the Columbia School of Journalism. Below is approximately what I said, with links to websites I showed during the talk, and few footnotes. Our thanks to … Continue reading

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The public domain gets the last word

In 1857, work began on a revolutionary new dictionary covering the entire history of English word usage with example quotations. The first installment of A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles, covering A through Ant, appeared in 1884. The last, … Continue reading

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Extra! Extra!

Sometimes one work’s arrival in the public domain brings extras along with it. In two days, Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur’s play The Front Page, which Peter Marks called “the best play about newspapering ever written”, joins the public domain. … Continue reading

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Move fast and disintegrate things

John Taine’s science fiction novel Green Fire is set in 1990, and some of what it describes fits that time, like television and mobile phones. Other aspects, like gender and social customs, read much more like 1928, the year it … Continue reading

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“The havoc of this nicety… on the work of imagination”

While Lady Chatterley’s Lover was eventually published intact, Djuna Barnes’s first novel Ryder never was. Barnes replaced passages she was forced to cut with asterisks, “showing plainly”, she wrote, “where the war, so blindly waged on the written word, has … Continue reading

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Once freed of obscenity charges, soon freed of copyright claims

One of the longest-running “Can we publish this?” questions in literature concerns Lady Chatterley’s Lover. D. H. Lawrence first issued his erotic novel in Italy in 1928. The UK and US banned it, and also stymied its copyright. Later court … Continue reading

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New life for a century-old African American opera

Harlem Renaissance composer Harry Lawrence Freeman wrote his opera Voodoo in 1914. In 1928 he registered its copyright, and had it first performed on a radio program, and then staged in New York with a full orchestra. Obscurity followed. Voodoo … Continue reading

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“On Christmas night all Christians sing”

“1928 was the annus mirabilis of the carol, particularly the Christmas carol,” write Jeremy Summerly and John Francis, not least for The Oxford Book of Carols. Instead of severe chant or sentimental Victoriana, editors Percy Dearmer, Martin Shaw, and Ralph … Continue reading

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A public domain gift for difficult journeys

The US copyright system often makes it hard to determine the end of an artwork’s copyright. But we know it ends soon for N. C. Wyeth’s painting “Mary Rode on Thistles… and Joseph Waded the Stream Below”, which the Brandywine … Continue reading

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