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Tag Archives: PublicDomainDayCountdown
An impressive body of work
Four writers get credit on the 1930 copyright registration for “Body and Soul”: composer Johnny Green, and lyricists Robert Sour, Edward Heyman, and Frank Eyton. But many more artists shaped the perennial jazz standard we know today. Among its more … Continue reading
A controversial bestseller
Michael Gold’s bestselling novel Jews Without Money depicts the plight of poor East European immigrants in New York. It resonated with readers in 1930 facing not-yet-fully-acknowledged impacts of the Depression. Gold hoped it would counter antisemitic propaganda, but many readers … Continue reading
The debut of Disney’s distinctive dog design
Norm Ferguson joined Disney’s animation team in 1929, and quickly had a major influence on the studio’s style. In The Chain Gang, the bloodhounds he designed to chase Mickey Mouse impressed Disney with their expressiveness. Ferguson went on to animate … Continue reading
The ever transforming public domain
The Internet Archive has multiple events in January for Public Domain Day, including a contest for film transformations of public domain works. Those works themselves often involved transformation. Four songs that joined the public domain in 2024 were written for … Continue reading
Birds in hand
HathiTrust has created a 1930 Publications Collection for Public Domain Day. It already has over 20,000 items opened, many by their Copyright Review Program, which finds works without copyright renewals. Over 50,000 more items will open in 14 days, including … Continue reading
No soccer skills required
Duke’s Center for the Public Domain has its Public Domain Day post out, listing many works joining the public domain in 2026, and explaining the complicated factual and legal determinations sometimes needed to verify their status. Among the listed artworks … Continue reading
A psychoanalyst’s desire for a saner world
In Civilization and its Discontents, Sigmund Freud turned his psychoanalytic attention from the troubles of the individual to those of the world. The book, joining the US public domain in 16 days in both German and English, diagnoses inherent conflicts … Continue reading
Kafka becomes more accessible
Franz Kafka‘s work is now known around the world, but it couldn’t be read in English until after he died, and there’s still limited access to good English translations of much of his work. The English Kafka books I list … Continue reading
A cat called Good Fortune
The Cat Who Went to Heaven is among the early Newbery medalists that have aged the best over nearly a century. As Derrick Robinson describes, Elizabeth Coatsworth’s story, drawing upon Buddhist legends, shows the characters’ unfolding empathy and compassion leading … Continue reading
The original knights of Camelot return
Games can’t really be copyrighted as such, but their texts and visual elements can be. That leaves some games in an intellectual property limbo, like Camelot, a strategy game published in 1930 that’s now long out of production. Today’s fans … Continue reading
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