Law and the ArtsSusan W. Tiefenbrun Bloomsbury Academic, 28.02.1999 - 256 Seiten This interdisciplinary study examines the relationships between law and the humanities. The goal of the essays is to promote exchanges of ideas in such diverse, but related fields as law, literature, film, theater, communication, art, and architecture and to inspire readers to think about the laws hidden in the interstices of the arts as well as the artistry of the law. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 39
... become obsolete , rooted as they are in the in the technology of print . The recognition of a copyright and the practice of paying royalties emerged with the printing press . With the arrival of electronic reproduction , these practices ...
... become a Christian is to ask him to become someone who hates Jews . To ask Shylock to become someone who hates Jews , it just doesn't make any sense . It makes lots and lots of audiences very uncomfortable , and it's the reason why ...
... become a Christian himself , and thus enjoy the benefits of citizenship . For the majority , the trial scene is only an extended subplot , a necessary detour on the voyage to Belmont , making possible the resolution of all the other ...
Inhalt
Censorship and | 3 |
Censorship and the Arts in the United States Today | 17 |
Art and Repression in the McCarthy Era | 23 |
Urheberrecht | |
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