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Gutenberg's Legacy: Copyright, Censorship, and Religious Pluralism
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Thomas F. Cotter
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| This Article argues that some recent copyright-infringement
cases illustrate how courts sometimes fail to take seriously the
needs of religious believers to reproduce and distribute their
religion's core texts for purposes of their religious practice.
More specifically, although the Establishment Clause poses no
obstacle to the government's conferral of a copyright "subsidy"
upon the authors of religious texts, a variety of copyright doctrines,
including rules relating to authorship, copyright estoppel, and
merger, suggest that some otherwise copyrightable religious texts
may lack copyright protection due to the religion's attribution
of the text to supernatural origin or to the needs of the faithful
to access the precise words of the text. In addition, although
the Free Exercise Clause does not require the government to exempt
religious believers from general compliance with the Copyright
Act, the fair-use doctrine should in some instances shield believers
from liability, particularly when the copyright owner has sought
to use copyright as a tool for suppressing the practice of a breakaway
sect. If the law knows no heresy, then copyright law should not
serve as a tool for repressing religious dissent. |
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© 2003 by California Law Review, Inc.
California Law Review, Inc. (CLR) is a California
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