different shades of grey the arts of plagiarism different shades of grey the arts of plagiarism paul...
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Different shades of grey the arts of plagiarism
Different shades of grey the arts of plagiarism
Paul KleimanPALATINE
Higher Education Academy Subject Centre for Dance, Drama and
MusicLancaster University
Left: Book cover illustration by Anthony Roberts for Robert Heinlein (1970) ‘Double Star’
Right: Glenn Brown (2000) ‘The Loves of Shepherds’, Turner Prize entry
WARNING
PLAGIARISM CAN SERIOUSLY DAMAGE
YOUR ACADEMIC HEALTH
Plagiarised
Plagiarised
Original but derivative
“The outcome of this debate is that everyone now believes that there are many shades of opinion allowable in the sleazy world of the plagiarist: there aren’t it’s wrong—end of debate”
Contribution to the Jiscmail Plagiarism discussion list http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/PLAGIARISM.html
“I realised that I really ought to start worrying when they STOP copying me!”
(Ron Arad, Designer/Architect, 2010)
Creative property … has many lives—the newspaper arrives at our door, it becomes part of the archive of human knowledge, then it wraps fish. And, by the time ideas pass into their third and fourth lives, we lose track of where they came from, and we lose control of where they are going. The final dishonesty of the plagiarism fundamentalists is to encourage us to pretend that these chains of influence and evolution do not exist, and that a writer’s words have a virgin birth and an eternal life.
(Gladwell, 2004)
500 years of plagiarism creative borrowing
The Judgment of Paris, ca. 1510–20Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio or Santi) (Italian, Marchigian, 1483–1520)
The Judgment of Paris, ca. 1510–20Marcantonio Raimondi (Italian, ca. 1480–before 1534); Designed by Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio or Santi) (Italian, Marchigian, 1483–1520)http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ho/08/eusts/ho_19.74.1.htm
Marco Dente da Ravenna (Italian, active 1515-1527)The Judgment of Paris, ca. 1520, engraving after Raimondi after Raphael (photo: Phil)http://www.wesleyan.edu/dac/coll/prnt/eurmas.html
Manet, Edouard
Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe 1863; Luncheon on the Grass; Musee d'Orsay; Oil on canvas, 81 x 101 cm
http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/manet/dejeuner/
Advert for Aga Cookers
1935
http://creativeriff.com/2009/07/13/the-king-of-madison-avenue-by-kenneth-roman-book-review/
Pablo Picasso
Le déjeuner sur l'herbe (d'après Edouard Manet), 1960
© Succession Picasso 2003
http://www.musee-picasso.fr/pages/page_id18634_u1l2.htm
BOW WOW WOW
Album cover ‘See Jungle!........’ (1981)
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/f/f0/Bowwowwow_seejungle.jpg
20052001
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There are few intellectual offences more serious than plagiarism in academic and
professional contexts. (OWL, 2008)
Peter Bialobrzeski Shanghai, 2001www.artnet.com
Horst Zielske, Daniel ZielskeMegalopolis Shanghai, 2008
There are few intellectual offences more serious than plagiarism in academic and
professional contexts. (OWL, 2008)
Elliot Erwitt
Provence, France, 1955
http://www.andrewward.com/Elliott_Erwitt_Photo_Provence_France_1955.htm
HEINEKEN ADVERT, 1970s
http://www.advertisingarchives.capturew
eb.co.uk/images/trueimages/30/53/95/28/30539528-1.jpg
Art Rogers, Puppies, 1985
http://www.designobserver.com/observatory/entryprint.html?entry=6467
Jeff Koons, String of Puppies, 1988
http://www.law.harvard.edu/faculty/martin/art_law/image_rights.htm
Jack Vettriano. The Singing Butler, 1992 Illustrators’ Manual
Academic plagiarism
A few distinctions (Martin, 1994)
• Word-for-word plagiarism
• Paraphrasing plagiarism
• Plagiarism of secondary sources
• Plagiarism of the form of a source
• Plagiarism of ideas
• Plagiarism of authorship
Most of the plagiarism by university students that is challenged by their teachers is word-for-word plagiarism, simply because it is easiest to detect and prove. One of the most serious types, plagiarism of authorship - which occurs when a student gets someone else to write an essay - can be extremely difficult to detect and prove. This creates a suspicion that most of the concern is about the least serious cases. (Martin, 1994)
From "Avoiding Plagiarism," Purdue Online Writing Lab (OWL)
When Brahms wrote his first symphony, he was accused of having used a big theme from Beethoven's Ninth. His reply was that “any fool could see that.“
(Julian Barnes, 2005)
These problems arise from the reality of borrowing and other techniques that involve some degree of copying as important elements in the creation of new works.
(Arewa, 2006)
Rodchenko, 1924
Matthew Cooper, 2006
Images from: www.creativereview.co.uk/crblog/constructivism-the-ism-that-just-keeps-givin
It may come as a shock to customers, but most designers regularly dispatch staff worldwide to scour vintage depots in search of inspiration.
(The fashion world is stalled in a staunch postmodernism, where success is measured in the ability to synthesize various influences and make them commercially viable.)
These designers buy up bags, belts, or even a coat and then limit their pilfering to the details: the stitching here, perhaps, or a buttonhole there. But they usually stop a hemline short of producing a direct copy.
(Larocca, 2002)
Wong, 1973
Ghesquiere, 2002
A conception of the creative
process that imagines that new
works are original and
autonomous may often be at
odds with actual acts of
creation that in many
instances involve copying,
collaboration, and other uses
of existing works.(Arewa, 2006)
1957
2002
Book cover illustration by Anthony Roberts for
Robert Heinlein (1970) ‘Double Star’
Glenn Brown (2000) ‘The Loves of Shepherds’,
Turner Prize entry
Images and text from http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertanment/1044375.stm
The chairman of the Turner Prize jury, Sir Nicholas Serota, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that the painting was not a form of plagiarism.
He said: “Glenn Brown has frequently used the work of other artists in developing his work, but that is true of Picasso, who borrowed from Rembrandt…..this is not new.
“He uses other artists’ work, but that doesn’t mean to say you could possibly mistake his work for theirs….he takes the image, he transforms it, he gives it a completely different scale.”
The discourses of the disciplines
Consideration of issues such as influence, intertextuality,
formulaic cultural production, appropriation and borrowing
are important parts of discourse in a number of fields of study.
In musicology, for example, terms used to discuss relationships between
musical texts include borrowing, self-borrowing,
transformative imitation, quotation, allusion, homage,
modeling, emulation, recomposition, influence,
paraphrase, and indebtedness.
In literary criticism, terms such as intertextuality, allusion,
quotation, and influence are used.
(Arewa, 2007)
• Multiple phenomena are being addressed.
• Multiple practices = multiple causal factors and
multiple remedies.
• Plagiarism is necessarily a chaotic conception,
not a scientific one
• Plagiarism will not be resolved by better
measuring instruments:—there is no ‘it’ to
measure.
• A far better strategy than feeding the moral
panic by numbers is to confront the phenomenon
in its complexity.
(Clegg and Flint, 2006)
As examples accumulate … it becomes apparent that appropriation, mimicry, quotation, allusion, and sublimated collaboration consist of a kind of sine qua non of the creative act, cutting across all forms and genres in the realm of cultural production.
Jonathan Lethem, The Ecstasy of Plagiarism, Harpers Magazine Feb
2007
Academic plagiarism
Staff Students
Institution
The challenge ahead is to consider how staff, student, and institutional perspectives can be reconciled or unified, as well as balancing them with the QAA Code of Practice and maintaining the reputation of the university as one that values high academic principles.Flint, Abbi, Clegg, Sue and Macdonald, Ranald(2006)'Exploring staff perceptions of student plagiarism',Journal ofFurther and Higher Education,30:2,145 — 156
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I must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiarise
I must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiarise
I must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiariseI must not plagiarise
So……
How might we…
creatively?
collectively?
effectively?
…tackle plagiarism?
Discuss.
References
AREWA, O. (2006) From J.C. Bach to Hip Hop: Musical Borrowing, Copyright and Cultural Context. Case Legal Studies Research Paper No. 04-21, North Carolina Law Review, Vol. 84, p. 547, 2006
Available at: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/Delivery.cfm/SSRN_ID633241_code542089.pdf?abstractid=633241
AREWA, O. (2007 ) ‘Culture as Property: Intellectual Property, Local Norms and Global Rights’. Northwestern Public Law Research Paper No. 07-13 Working Paper Series
Available at:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/Delivery.cfm/SSRN_ID981423_code337501.pdf?abstractid=981423
AREWA, O. (2007) ‘Freedom to Copy: Copyright, Creation and Context’. UC Davis Law Review, Vol. 41, No. 2, 2007, Northwestern Public Law Research Paper No. 07-06
Available at:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/Delivery.cfm/SSRN_ID964054_code254274.pdf?abstractid=964054
AREWA, O. (2008) ‘Borrowing the Blues: Copyright and the Contexts of Robert Johnson’ Northwestern Public Law Research Paper No. 08-19 Working Paper Series
Available at:
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/Delivery.cfm/SSRN_ID1139931_code337501.pdf?abstractid=1132789
FLINT, ABBI, CLEGG, SUE and MACDONALD, RANALD (2006) 'Exploring staff perceptions of student plagiarism', Journal of Further and Higher Education,30:2,145 — 156
GLADWELL, M. (2004) ‘Something borrowed: Should a charge of plagiarism ruin your life?’. Article in The New Yorker, 22 November 2004.
Available at: http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2004/11/22/041122fa_fact and http://www.gladwell.com/2004/2004_11_25_a_borrowed.html
LETHEM, J. (2007) ‘The ecstasy of influence: a plagiarism’. Harper’s Magazine, February 2007. Available at: http://www.harpers.org/archive/2007/0081387
STOKES, S. (2001) ‘Art and Copyright’. Hart Publishing. UK
(Limited view available: http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=h-XBqKIryaQC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_summary_r&cad=0 )
STOKES, S. (2002) ‘Idea/Expression’. Contribution to Commons-Law discussion list.
Available at http://mail.sarai.net/pipermail/commons-law/2002-December/000160.html
Based on article in The Art Newspaper (date unknown).
TAYLOR, K. (2006) 'Plagiarism and Piracy: a publisher’s perspective. Learned Publishing, 19(4) 259-266(8). Available (free) at: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/alpsp/lp/2006/00000019/00000004/art00004
History of Plagiarism
•The word plagiarism derives from Latin roots: plagiarius, an abductor, and plagiare, to steal
•Shakespeare stole most of his historical plots directly from Holinshed
•The extent of Coleridge's plagiarism has been debated by scholars since Thomas de Quincey, himself an accomplished borrower, published an exposé in Tait's Magazine a couple of weeks after Coleridge's death •Oscar Wilde was repeatedly accused of plagiarism: hence the celebrated exchange with Whistler: "I wish I'd said that, James." "Don't worry, Oscar, you will.“•Martin Luther King plagiarised part of a chapter of his doctoral thesis •George Harrison was successfully sued for plagiarising the Chiffons' He's So Fine for My Sweet Lord.
•All culture is plagiarism.
•To read Eliot’s The Waste Land is also to read Shakespeare, Chaucer, Webster and many others. According to one critic, Eliot practises a "verbal kleptomania".
• When Brahms wrote his first symphony, he was accused of having used a big theme from Beethoven's Ninth. His reply was that “any fool could see that.“
•Oscar Wilde was repeatedly accused of plagiarism: hence the celebrated exchange with Whistler: "I wish I'd said that, James." "Don't worry, Oscar, you will.“
•Martin Luther King plagiarised part of a chapter of his doctoral thesis
•George Harrison was successfully sued for plagiarising the Chiffons' He's So Fine for My Sweet Lord
“In truth, in literature, in science and in art, there are, and can be, few, if any, things, which in an abstract sense are strictly new and original throughout. Every book in literature, science and art, borrows, and must necessarily borrow, and use much which was well known and used before.”;
(Arewa, 2006)
New ideas are never wholly new and often use prior ideas as building blocks, whether by accepting them or rejecting them
(Leval, l997)
The term copying is often taken to be the equivalent of infringement, but it may also be used to describe practices connected to the creation of new works, including borrowing practices in varied creative fields.
(Arewa, 2006)
Because borrowing, copying, and other uses of existing works are pervasive aspects of creation processes, copyright frameworks as a property rule may be used to restrict access in a manner that may hinder the creation of new works.
(Arewa, 2006)
determining what constitutes inappropriate copying is potentially problematic in the creation context, at least in part because copyright doctrine does not appropriately recognize and contextualize the copying often involved in creation processes.
(Arewa, 2006)
These problems arise from the reality of borrowing and other techniques that involve some degree of copying as important elements in the creation of new works. Consequently, a conception of the creative process that imagines that new works are original and autonomous may often be at odds with actual acts of creation that in many instances involve copying, collaboration, and other uses of existing works.
(Arewa, 2006)
Rather than denying the reality of copying and its importance in processes of creation, narratives incorporating the freedom to copy would begin with recognition of the importance of copying in creation.
(Arewa, 2007)
Legal discussions of creativity and processes of creation would benefit from a more nuanced understanding of copying and creation. Since conceptions of copying and creation remain under-developed in legal doctrine, copyright law can benefit from consideration of copying and creation in other disciplines, including musicology and literary criticism. In addition to providing examples of discussions of creation that take account of the relationships between texts, such disciplines can also help copyright doctrine develop a more nuanced vocabulary about copying.
(Arewa, 2007)
1. [A] work may be original even though it closely resembles other works so long as the similarity is fortuitous, not the result of copying.
2. Next to the originator of a good sentence is the first quoter of it . . . . Then there are great ways of borrowing. Genius borrows nobly
3. Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal.
4. [M]ost Authors steal their Works, or buy.
5. Creativity is selective copying.
6. My purpose in reading has ever secretly been not to come and judge, but to come and steal.
7. Literature has been in a plundered, fragmentary state for a long time.
8. My purpose in reading has ever secretly been not to come and judge, but
to come and steal
1. Feist Publ’ns v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co., 499 U.S. 340, 345 (1991).2. RALPH WALDO EMERSON, COMPLETE WORKS VOL. VIII: LETTERS AND SOCIAL AIMS 197 (1876).3. T.S. Eliot, Philip Massinger, in THE SACRED WOOD: ESSAYS ON POETRY ANDCRITICISM 123, 125 (3d ed. 1932).4. Alexander Pope, An Essay on Criticism in THE POEMS OF ALEXANDER POPE 143,163 (John Butt ed., 1963).5. JOHN DUFRESNE, THE LIE THAT TELLS A TRUTH: A GUIDE TO WRITING FICTION 59 n.*** (2003) (quoting Philip Johnson).
2
© DavidJulian.com
According to the Office of the Dean of Students: "To submit to your instructor a paper or comparable assignment that is not truly the product of your own mind and skill is to commit plagiarism. To put it bluntly, plagiarism is the act of stealing the ideas and/or expression of another and representing them as your own. It is a form of cheating and a kind of scholastic dishonesty which can incur severe penalties. It is important, therefore, that you understand what constitutes plagiarism, so that you will not unwittingly jeopardize your college career."1
From "The Broadest Search," Turnitin.com [pdf]