Future Pasts

March 11, 2018 By: Robert Spoo

This blog concerns itself with the messy, multidisciplinary spaces of the archives—both real and imagined. It brings together everyone involved in the creation of archives to discuss how these spaces shape, have shaped, and will shape the study of modernism.

May 7, 2025 By: Tobias Boes

In October of 1905, a defamation trial that would have a lasting impact on the development of literary modernism took place in the sleepy German harbor town of Lübeck. A lawyer with the slightly preposterous name “Ritter aus Tondern” was suing his cousin, the regionalist writer Johannes Valentin Dose, claiming that Dose had maliciously portrayed him as an alcoholic and an adulterer in the 1904 novel The Milksop ( Der Muttersohn)

May 7, 2025 By: Tobias Boes

Translated by Tobias Boes. Read his critical introduction here. The other day I was much abused in Lübeck, my hometown. My novel Buddenbrooks became the subject of a long and heated debate in a trial concerning the freedom of the press that was reminiscent of the Bilse affair. [1] It was a noisy matter, the particulars of which need not concern us very much. My novel has become an integral part of every public outrage about art, because its characters are partially based on living people, and...

January 29, 2025 By: Anne E. Fernald

On January 6, 1925, Jessie Redmon Fauset wrote a letter to Langston Hughes from Paris. It's a long letter—over a thousand words—and it balances advice with appeal in ways that capture the intimacy and strength of their friendship. Her first novel, There is Confusion, had been published in 1924 and Fauset was on leave from her position as the literary editor of The Crisis, studying and writing in Paris. She had planned the trip as a celebration: finally, at forty-two, she had published a novel...

September 12, 2024 By: Melissa J. Homestead

Melissa Homestead and Emily Rau have spent the past decade collaborating with Andrew Jewell and a team at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln to create the Complete Letters of Willa Cather. With 2,800 letters published at the time of this writing, the Complete Letters is an ongoing digital scholarly edition of all known letters written by American author Willa Cather. The edition features full transcriptions of the letters, detailed annotations, high-quality scans, and sophisticated searching and...

January 17, 2024 By: Joel Hawkes

By Joel Hawkes; Madison Robinson; Vanessa Funk; Katie Croudy-Hollott; Ella McQueen-Denz; Samantha Burt; Maya Smith; Marcus Tisot; Sam Oosterman; Alistair Corp; Devan Gillard; Emily Coldwell; Sean Godwin; Noah Brandon; Thomas Nienhuis In the fall of 2019, the Mary Butts Letters Project began seeking collaborators to help track, transcribe, digitize, and critique the letters of lesser-known British modernist author, Mary Butts (1890–1937). Scholars, librarians, undergraduate and graduate students...

November 30, 2022 By: William S. Brockman

James Joyce was an avid postcard writer at a time when the western world’s fascination with postcards was at its peak. We know of nearly a thousand postcards that he sent, dating from a Christmas card to Frances Sheehy Skeffington in 1898 to a card to his brother Stanislaus in early January 1941 announcing his arrival in Zurich only a week before his death. Postal correspondence is a fundamental point of reference in both Ulysses and Finnegans Wake, their texts replete with various postal media...

November 2, 2022 By: Scott Matthews

The past year’s global pandemic may be remembered as a time of boundaries: six foot or two-meter personal bubbles, restricted entry to and movement within public spaces, and the once-steady stream of international travellers reduced to a trickle. In many ways, this new reality further emphasized the concentrically fortified position occupied by the Special Collections archives housed in the University of Victoria’s McPherson Library. How does a department located in the basement of a locked...

March 23, 2022 By: Robert Spoo

This blog post is about an institution of modernism that is quite different from the ones that Lawrence Rainey examined in his groundbreaking book, Institutions of Modernism: Literary Elites and Public Culture. His subjects were patronage, collecting, speculation, investment, little magazines, and deluxe editions—institutions that marked modernism’s “tactical retreat” into a “counter-space securing a momentary respite from a public realm increasingly degraded [by mass media and market values]...

January 29, 2021 By: Frances Dickey

Almost as soon as they began corresponding in 1930, T. S. Eliot told Emily Hale that he treasured her letters—not just the words, but the paper itself: “I cannot bear to be separated from your letters at present, not so much for need to refer to the contents, some of which I repeat to myself often during the day and night, but for the touch of the paper and sight of the writing.”

November 12, 2020 By: Lauren M. Rosenblum

In Towards a Feminist Life, Sara Ahmed writes of feminism as “a fragile archive, a body assembled from shattering, from splattering, an archive whose fragility gives us responsibility.” [1] From this tenuous archive, I seek an affirming inclusion in modernist studies: Urmila Seshagiri explains in a recent Modernism/modernity Print Plus cluster that “the process of canon-formation––and deformation, and reformation––constitutes the simplest and yet the most complex act in feminist scholarship...

March 23, 2020 By: Margaret Konkol

In the opening days of 2020 modernists may have rejoiced over two significant events. On January 1, works published in 1924 entered the public domain. On January 2, Princeton University opened to the public the recently uncrated 1,131 letters from T. S. Eliot to Emily Hale. In these two opposing examples of the modernist archive 2020 stages a central tension between diffusion and enclosure, between the dream of a universal library—which paradoxically and simultaneously enacts a “library without...

September 4, 2019 By: Lauren Elle DeGaine

Southern Vancouver Island’s 100-kilometer-long BC-14 Highway slides predominantly east to west along British Columbia coastline through traditional Coast Salish territory. Beneath the old-growth trees that are the marrow of this lush ecosystem is the small, unincorporated community of Shirley, and the Cook Kettle Press (fig.1). Though small, the press is a regional hotbed of letterpress activity. As a print shop, it provides opportunities for artists to use its space and equipment. It also acts...

March 29, 2019 By: Joel Hawkes

Located in Special Collections at the University of Victoria is a little studied folder that contains fifty-one letters written by the British modernist author Mary Butts (1890-1937) to friend and fellow British modernist Douglas Goldring (1887-1960), with some few to Goldring’s second wife, Malin.

November 13, 2018 By: Amanda Golden

Alice Walker began 1982 with Virginia Woolf. Walker would spend the year recording events, plans, and phone numbers in spiral-bound pages of a calendar she had acquired filled with photographs of Woolf and her contemporaries. As Walker crossed out days, her purple ink seeped through one page, partly obscuring Woolf’s photograph on the verso. [1] The lines meet Woolf’s likeness, a purple X just passing her eye. The range of inks that Walker used throughout her calendar suggest that this was chance, but the ink also recalls Walker’s novel published the same year, The Color Purple; likely unbeknownst to Walker, it was also a color in which Woolf preferred to write. [2] It is the materiality of circumstance that makes this artifact a vestige of mass culture, everyday life, and artistic creation.

August 25, 2018 By: Amy Hildreth Chen

Using the modernist archive requires finding it first. The modernist archive does not live in one collection at one repository, such as a single university special collections department or one pivotal private library. Rather, the modernist archive is a term used to conceptualize a networked set of collections across many repositories in the United States or abroad. [1] The fact that the modernist archive is dispersed rather than centralized is critical because each institution’s holdings are more or less discoverable based on local application of user experience (UX) principles. Weave, a Journal of Library User Experience defines UX as employing a variety of methodologies to inform improvements to physical and digital space so that the user can easily access collections and services. Th US Department of Health and Human Services provides an overview of UX basics that, adapted for libraries and archives, would require repositories to identify their users, what they want, what skills they have, and which they don’t. According to Coral Sheldon-Hess, when UX is properly implemented, users of all levels of expertise can more easily access what they need. When UX is ignored or poorly applied, users are more likely to perpetuate pre-existing archival silences as well as less likely to have successful searches.

March 11, 2018 By: J. Matthew Huculak

The past twenty years, along with the promises and perils of the digital turn, have seen a robust engagement with the modernist archive. One can map nearly point for point the rise of the New Modernist Studies and the Modernist Studies Association with the rise of digital resources that have reenergized the field: the Modernist Journals Project (1997), the Modernist Magazines Project (2006), the Blue Mountain Project (2012), the Modernist Versions Project (2012), ModNets (2013), and the Modernist Archives Publishing Project (2013), among others, have all contributed to the “ expansive” forces enlarging the universe of material modernity.
Print Plus Exclusive

Copyright and the Modernist Archive: James Joyce’s Correspondence at Antwerp

March 23, 2022 By: Robert Spoo

Volume 6 Cycle 3

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This blog post is about an institution of modernism that is quite different from the ones that Lawrence Rainey examined in his groundbreaking book, Institutions of Modernism: Literary Elites and Public Culture. His subjects were patronage, collecting, speculation, investment, little magazines, and deluxe editions—institutions that marked modernism’s “tactical retreat” into a “counter-space securing a momentary respite from a public realm increasingly degraded [by mass media and market values], even as it entailed a fatal compromise with precisely that degradation.”[1] This retreat was an ambivalent one, the response of a divided economic self that wished to participate in consumer culture without wholly surrendering itself to the assaults of commodification. The institutions that Rainey explored were private or semi-private formations: limited editions aimed at collectors and professionals; uncompromising periodicals purchased by the discerning few; the private markets, poised uncertainly between gifting and purchasing, that patrons built for rendering material aid to creators and, sometimes, for trafficking in their creations.

Copyright and its laws were also an institution of modernism, but copyright has always been viewed as an adjunct of public markets, a means of incentivizing creative production and rewarding and protecting published works. Copyright operates openly in the commodified space of public culture. Historically and structurally, it has been the public alternative to private patronage. Patronage could offer incentives and rewards for creativity, but it could do nothing about piracy and freeriding once creations had been made available to the public.

Copyright is not as vivid as a patron’s gift; often it gives authors only the uncertain prospect of royalties, a gray expectancy stretching out over years. Royalty payments are mediated, discounted gifts; they convert consumers into micro-patrons. And yet the micro-patronage secured by copyrights can be a welcome boon to popular authors. In 1760—fifty years after Parliament had enacted the first copyright statute[2]—Oliver Goldsmith declared that “[English poets] have now no other patrons but the public . . . a good and a generous master.”[3] Nearly a century later, Charles Dickens, who was a beneficiary of mass literacy on both sides of the Atlantic, toasted “the great compact phalanx of the people” as the true benefactors of literature, in contrast to “individual patrons—sometimes munificent, often sordid, always few.”[4]

John Quinn (1870-1924), patron of modern authors and artists. Oil on canvas by John Butler Yeats (1908)
Fig. 1. John Quinn (1870-1924), patron of modern authors and artists. Oil on canvas by John Butler Yeats (1908). National Portrait Gallery (Smithsonian). Used under Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication.

Modernism was contemporaneous with a growth spurt in copyright laws, when major revisions of statutes in the United States (1909) and Britain (1911) secured longer, stronger rights for many authors.[5] Yet modernism’s copyrights, viewed from a transatlantic perspective, were often porous and precarious. The United States had only recently extended copyright protection to non-US authors, and this protection was conditioned on compliance with onerous rules, notably the statutory command that works be typeset, printed, and bound on American soil within a few months after their publication abroad in order to acquire US copyrights.

Foreign authors could not always satisfy these protectionist requirements, especially when their writings were thought too experimental, too indecent, or too unpopular to warrant the costs or legal risks of reprinting in America. Many noted modernist works lacked US copyright for failure to comply with the law’s manufacturing clause: the Paris edition of James Joyce’s Ulysses; English editions of Virginia Woolf’s The Voyage Out and Night and Day; D. H. Lawrence’s Sons and Lovers and Lady Chatterley’s Lover; Ezra Pound’s early volumes of poetry issued in London; and many others. Lawful pirates—to use an oxymoronic but accurate phrase—were quick to pounce on unprotected works in the United States. Samuel Roth, the New York pirate-pornographer, was prominent among these reviled reprinters, but he was not alone.[6]

1922 Paris edition of Ulysses. Photograph by Geoffrey Barker
Fig. 2. 1922 Paris edition of Ulysses. Photograph by Geoffrey Barker. Used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.
Cover of UK first edition of Virginia Woolf’s Night and Day (1919)
Fig. 3. Cover of UK first edition of Virginia Woolf’s Night and Day (1919). Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Copyright was thus a hybrid institution of transatlantic modernism, a composite of protection and public domain. Modernism’s commons was often a forced and premature one, especially in the United States. In this respect, copyright was, for many non-US authors, an elusive, even illusory property right. Yet by mid-century, American law had begun to make changes that would benefit foreign authors; and in the 1990s, the US Congress adopted laws that restored copyright for many modernist works, including copyrights lost to the pitiless manufacturing clause.

In addition, the 1990s saw the passage of legislation that lengthened existing and future copyrights by twenty years in both the United States and the European Union. These controversial extensions had the effect of postponing the public domain for modernism by two decades. In some cases, works that had recently entered EU public domains—works by Woolf, Joyce, Yeats, Ford Madox Ford, Havelock Ellis, and others—were restored to copyright in the European Union. If transatlantic modernism had at first suffered from an unstable blend of commons and copyright, by the end of the century many modernist works enjoyed restored and extended copyrights on both sides of the Atlantic. Copyrights that had once been nonexistent or questionable were now guaranteed to endure for nearly a century or longer.

Many works of modernism are thus practically unique as forms of literary property. Whereas copyrights normally exist first and then, after a specified term, expire, many modernist works made the opposite journey, from public domain to copyright, in the course of a few decades. Commons first, then copyright: what a strange legal itinerary! And what a remarkable relationship these works had to the reading and purchasing public, what Dickens called “the great compact phalanx of the people.” Works that at one time had been issued in affordable copies by lawful pirates were later recaptured as exclusive property for authors or their estates; the public that had paid the pirate’s often discounted price were now required to pay above-market premiums for a restored monopoly—a strange economic itinerary.

Portion of section 15 of the 1909 US Copyright Act
Fig. 4. Portion of section 15 of the 1909 US Copyright Act: the manufacturing clause, requiring prompt typesetting, printing, and binding on US soil of all English-language books published abroad, on pain of loss of US copyright.

The works of J. R. R. Tolkien illustrate this transition from commons to copyright. The doubtful US copyright of The Lord of the Rings—due in part to questionable compliance with the law’s manufacturing clause—led to unauthorized but lawful American reprints of the trilogy in the 1960s. Tolkien’s authorized publisher responded with a competing paperback, and the public soon had a choice of handy editions selling for less than a dollar per copy. As sales to college students soared, a loyal following developed for Middle-earth that later, after Congress restored Tolkien’s copyrights in the 1990s, helped his estate and its licensees to earn billions of dollars from protected movies, video games, and merchandise. Tolkien’s popularity had been sown by the American public domain; the profits were reaped by restored monopolies.

J. R. R. Tolkien, probably taken in 1940s
Fig. 5. J. R. R. Tolkien, probably 1940s. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Now, let’s put the institution of copyright together with the modernist archive. Modernism is still an inhabitant of libraries, archives, and private collections. Letters, manuscripts, journals, diaries, photographs, and other artifacts of modernism’s productive moment are held in repositories, awaiting their public début in print or digitized formats. Modernism actually exists in at least two archives: published and unpublished. The unpublished archive has not yet fully joined the published one to offer the possibility of a complete, or more complete, picture of the period. In this respect, modernism can’t really be thought of as a concluded historical moment. Its moment of production has passed; its moment of emergence is still very much with us. Copyright’s long monopolies have uncannily prolonged the history of modernism far beyond any canonical estimate of the movement’s endpoint; copyright has been both formative and inhibitive of modernism’s productive life and its archival afterlife.

But how quickly will submerged modernism emerge, and what are the obstacles to its emergence? One obstacle is copyright. If copyright initially played a role in encouraging the creation of modernist works—this is, after all, the classic incentive theory of intellectual property[7]—it now often plays a role in retarding the emergence of modernism from the unpublished archive. Permissions from estates are not always forthcoming. Sometimes, rights-holders can’t be found or don’t respond to requests—this is the “orphan works” problem.[8] At other times, heirs who own copyrights distrust or dislike scholarship or fail to understand what scholars do. Still other estates treat ancestral copyrights as if they were family jewels, a phenomenon I’ve called the heirloom fallacy.[9] It’s related, perhaps, to what behavioral economists call the endowment effect.[10] These sentimental copyright-hoarders generate irrational markets that further inhibit the growth of published modernism.

One of the most spectacularly disagreeable estates in the past few decades has been the estate of James Joyce, controlled until recently by his grandson, Stephen James Joyce (1932–2020). The estate has brandished its copyrights as a weapon for defending the “privacy” of Joyce and his mostly deceased family, and has regularly threatened scholars, denied their requests to quote or adapt, and—even when permission was tendered—often demanded prohibitive fees.[11]

James Joyce, Zurich, ca. 1918, by Camille Ruf
Fig. 6. James Joyce, Zurich, ca. 1918, by Camille Ruf (1872–1939). Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Two things checked the Joyce estate’s aggressions. The first was a federal lawsuit brought against it by the Stanford Fair Use Project and several lawyers (myself included) on behalf of a literature professor at Stanford University.[12] The second was the growth of the public domain, as copyrights in Joyce’s works began to expire around the world, especially at the end of 2011, seventy years after his death. At that time, copyrights in editions of Joyce’s works that had been published during his lifetime expired in most of the European Union, and copyrights in his unpublished writings expired in the United States and most of the European Union. At last, the long-awaited thaw had begun, following the twenty-year freeze imposed during the 1990s.

But the thaw was not total or consistent. Certain published works—Finnegans Wake, for example—that had entered EU public domains remained in copyright, and still do, in the United States, where copyright laws are not fully harmonized with those of other countries. Spain has a copyright term of the author’s life plus eighty years for authors of Joyce’s vintage, in contrast to most of the European Union, where seventy years postmortem is the prevailing term. Most anomalously, the United Kingdom keeps unpublished works by Joyce and other earlier authors in copyright until the end of 2039. Though efforts have been made to repeal or modify this eccentric 2039 rule, there has been no success to date. Brexit has changed nothing here.

The truth is that there is no such thing as a global public domain. Inconsistent national copyright laws have created what I call an uncoordinated public domain, a patchwork commons.[13] We can speak of the world’s evolving public domains—plural—but a unified commons for modernism won’t exist for a long time. The transition from modernism’s unpublished archive to its published archive will remain a work-in-progress for decades to come. This also means that copyright owners, increasingly distant from the life of modernism’s production, will continue to play an outsized role in the afterlife of modernism. Owners can permit modernism to come forth from the archives, or they can erect obstacles.

Some owners have been cooperative. Samuel Beckett authorized the editing of his unpublished letters decades ago. The Willa Cather Trust is willing to work with scholars to permit reasonable quotation and reproduction from her copyrighted writings. But others have been difficult or impossible. Paul Zukofsky, the son of the poet Louis Zukofsky, became what one scholar called “the arch-bridge troll of literary executors.”[14] Representatives of the estates of Marianne Moore and T. S. Eliot were, at one time at least, extremely protective of those authors’ works and reputations, and they used copyrights to patrol the borders of acceptability.

Willa Cather, taken in 1921
Fig. 7. Willa Cather, 1921. Courtesy of Willa Cather Archive at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Wikimedia Commons.

Projects can thrive when copyright owners grant permission. Permission is a magic carpet that allows scholars to fly above the irregularities of the global commons. But when permission is denied or unavailable, a project must negotiate, in the manner of a land vehicle, the rugged, pitted terrain of the public domain. Special perils lie in wait for online digital projects, which can be accessed in any country where the internet is available, sometimes in possible violation of local copyright laws. James Joyce’s Correspondence—an online resource that will eventually make all of Joyce’s unpublished letters available in annotated form—has received, as of this writing, no permission from the Joyce estate. The project relies on the possibilities of the uncoordinated public domain. It’s a wholly law-enabled project.

Landing page for James Joyce’s Correspondence.
Fig. 8. Landing page for James Joyce’s Correspondence. Courtesy of the project editors.

Until recently, scholars have had to make do with a limited published archive of Joyce’s letters, contained chiefly in volumes issued in 1957, 1966, 1975, and 1987. Significant collections of Joyce’s correspondence have come to light since then, in the British Library, Yale’s Beinecke Library, the National Library of Ireland, the New York Public Library, the University of Texas at Austin’s Harry Ransom Center, and other archives. With the expiration of copyright in Joyce’s unpublished writings after 2011 throughout much of the world, this correspondence—some 2,000 letters, postcards, and other items—became available for publication in many countries.

Beinecke Library, Yale University
Fig. 9. Beinecke Library, Yale University. Photograph by Michael Kastelic. Used under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.

James Joyce’s Correspondence, hosted at the University of Antwerp, is a free-to-use, open-access, online edition made possible under the copyright laws of Belgium and many other countries. Initially led by William S. Brockman, Kevin Dettmar, the late Michael Groden, and myself, the project has expanded to include additional scholars: Sabrina Alonso, Josip Batinić, Ronan Crowley, and Dirk Van Hulle.

The project’s first release, in June 2021, contained eighty-seven letters, cards, and telegrams written by Joyce (or at his direction or dictation) to Ezra Pound and Pound’s wife between 1915 and 1938. I supplied the annotations and a substantial introduction to these materials.[15] In February 2022, a second release, edited and annotated by Sabrina Alonso and Bill Brockman, contained seven letters by Joyce to Claud W. Sykes and twenty-two letters to Paul Ruggiero. This is a start, but only a start. Some 1,900 known letters remain to be added.

Opening of Joyce’s letter to Pound, December 5, 1918
Fig. 10. Opening of Joyce’s letter to Pound, December 5, 1918. See transcription and annotations in James Joyce’s Correspondence. Courtesy of the project editors.

Lacking the Joyce estate’s blessing, James Joyce’s Correspondence relies on the great permission-giver: the public domain. The project has been digitally constructed to take account of the uncoordinated global commons; we lawfully adhere to the current possibilities and limitations imposed by national laws of copyright. The project’s geo-blocking technology permits access in countries where Joyce’s unpublished letters are in the public domain and prevents access where copyrights in the letters subsist. Our project is a negative image, as it were, of the patchwork commons: countries to which we grant access reflect the absence of copyright in Joyce’s letters; countries that are blocked indicate copyright’s presence.

Fortunately, geo-blocked countries are few. Our project currently blocks the United Kingdom, where the 2039 rule remains in effect. We also block Australia, where the law governing unpublished works contains some ambiguities. James Joyce’s Correspondence remains alert, however, to opportunities to unblock countries. In January 2022, we lifted our ban on Spain when its anomalous copyright term—eighty years postmortem—expired for Joyce’s writings, allowing his unpublished letters to join the public domains of the rest of the European Union. Should the United Kingdom repeal or modify its 2039 rule, our project will respond accordingly. James Joyce’s Correspondence is a barometer of the changing pressure of global copyright.

Our project is also aware of its own copyrights. We claim copyright in our editorial apparatus: introductions, annotations, and similar material. But we are careful to state that reasonable quotation from this material may be made, without our permission, under provisions for fair use and fair dealing in national copyright laws. Nor do we do seek to control any new copyrights that might arise in our texts of Joyce’s letters. Because an unfortunate EU law[16] allows us to claim new copyrights in Joyce’s letter texts within the European Union, we expressly grant a general Creative Commons (“CC”) License to copy, distribute, display, and perform the letter texts on condition that users do not assert their own rights in the letter texts or prohibit or discourage others from making CC-Licensed use of those texts.[17] We disapprove of efforts to rebuild the ancien régime of restriction on the ruins of expired copyrights.

James Joyce’s Correspondence is both a record of Joyce’s modernism and a faithful recorder of the evolving modernist archive. As the institution of modernist copyright changes, the project will come to embody those changes, in both its substance and its form. As the institution of the global commons gradually eclipses copyright, modernism’s published archive will grow, and the shape of modernism will change in ways we can scarcely imagine.


Notes

[1] Lawrence Rainey, Institutions of Modernism: Literary Elites and Public Culture (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1998), 5

[2] Statute of Anne, 8 Anne, c. 19 (1710). https://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/anne_1710.asp.

[3] Oliver Goldsmith, Letters from a Citizen of the World to His Friends in the East (London: Charles Knight & Co., 184), 172.

[4] The Speeches of Charles Dickens, 1841–1870, ed. Richard Herne Shepherd (London: Chatto & Windus, 1884), 140–41. Rainey began his book with Dickens’s toast to the micro-patronage of the people (Institutions of Modernism, 1–2).

[5] For the U.K. Copyright Act 1911, see https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo5/1-2/46/contents/enacted. For the US Copyright Act of 1909, see https://www.copyright.gov/history/1909act.pdf.

[6] For a full discussion of copyright and modernism, see Robert Spoo, Without Copyrights: Piracy, Publishing, and the Public Domain (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013).

[7] See Christopher Jon Sprigman, “Copyright and Creative Incentives: What We Know (and Don’t),” Houston Law Review 55 (2017): 451–78.

[8] Register of Copyrights, “Orphan Works and Mass Digitization,” US Copyright Office (June 2015). https://www.copyright.gov/orphan/reports/orphan-works2015.pdf.

[9] Robert Spoo, “Copyrights and ‘Design-Around’ Scholarship,” James Joyce Quarterly 44 (2007): 564–68.

[10] Russell B. Korobkin, “The Endowment Effect and Legal Analysis,” Northwestern University Law Review 97 (2003): 1227–91.

[11] See Matthew Rimmer, “Bloomsday: Copyright Estates and Cultural Festivals,” Script-ed 2 (2005): 383–428; Robert Spoo, “Three Myths for Aging Copyrights: Tithonus, Dorian Gray, Ulysses,” Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal 31 (2012): 77–111.

[12] See Shloss v. Sweeney, 515 F. Supp. 2d 1068 (2007); “Shloss settles with Joyce Estate,” Stanford Report, March 26, 2007. See also Spoo, “Three Myths for Aging Copyrights,” 89–105.

[13] See Robert Spoo, “The Uncoordinated Public Domain,” Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal 35 (2016): 107–151.

[14] “Paul Zukofsky, Prodigy Who Became, Uneasily, a Virtuoso Violinist, Dies at 73,” New York Times, June 20, 2017.

[15] Robert Spoo, “James Joyce’s Letters to Ezra Pound: Alliances, Patronage, and Gifting.” https://jamesjoycecorrespondence.org/FM_02.xml?tab=0.

[16] Council Directive 93/98/EEC, art. 4, 1990 O.J. (L 290) 9 (EC). https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A01993L0098-20010622.

[17] James Joyce’s Correspondence, Copyrights and Permissions page: https://joyceletters.uantwerpen.be/exist/apps/jjletters/FM_04.xml?tab=0.