1. Characterizing Copyright in the Classroom TOP THREE PAPER.
- Author
-
Gillespie, Tarleton
- Subjects
COPYRIGHT ,PIRACY (Copyright) ,TEACHING aids ,EDUCATION ,CULTURE ,TECHNOLOGY - Abstract
To curb unauthorized downloading, the major film, music, and software corporations have developed public education campaigns aimed at children, extolling the virtues of copyright and the immorality of piracy. Some were designed to be shown among movie trailers in theaters, others are made available online; some are delivered to schools as curricular materials to be incorporated into K-12 classrooms. Through an examination of the materials themselves and through interviews with their designers, this presentation examines not only their characterization of copyright law, but their implicit claims about how, why, an by whom culture is produced, circulated, and consumed. These campaigns traffic in and perpetuate an industry-centric idea of what copyright is for, how technology is meant to be used, and why culture is important, helping to structure the dynamics of cultural participation. Amid these assumptions, comfortable roles are offered to young users of new media -- particular that of "consumer" rather than "user" or "citizen" -- roles that are far from neutral in the current debates about cultural policy, and work against the tide of emerging forms of creativity and collaboration. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008