重新发现从口头公式化传统到数字混音的累积创造力:我能得到见证吗?, 13 J.马歇尔牧师Intell。道具。L. 341 (2014)

Giancarlo F. Frosio
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引用次数: 9

摘要

在人类历史的大部分时间里,创造力的本质被理解为是累积和集体的。这一概念在很大程度上已被规范创造力和言论的现代政策所遗忘。尽管很难相信,我们不朽文化中最有价值的组成部分是在一个完全开放的制度下创建的,关于对已有表达的访问和重用。从柏拉图式的模仿到莎士比亚的“借来的羽毛”,我们文化的大部分都是在一种范式下产生的,在这种范式下,模仿——甚至剽窃——和社会作者身份构成了创造性时刻的基本要素。前现代的创意是从对已有的表达性内容的重复使用和并置的连续路线中传播开来的,从口头到文本的过渡,然后融合了两种传统。口述公式化传统的累积性和合作性主导了史诗文学的发展。西方文化的文学支柱《伊利亚特》和《奥德赛》完全是在这一传统的熔炉中锻造出来的。后来,在马克宏比乌斯的改写艺术和拉丁模仿原则的支持下,中世纪史诗从类似的公式和传统模式的分享和重组中发展出来。对亚瑟王、罗兰等标志性人物形象的延续、自由再利用和重塑,使传奇文学和浪漫文学成为推动文化跨国传播的有力工具。过去和现在的相似之处凸显了当前版权制度的无能,无法重现过去证明如此富有成效的累积和协作的创作过程。特别是,作为史诗文学创作动力的标志性人物的不断发展和循环使用,已成为逐渐消失的记忆。这是因为我们制定的创新政策阻碍了信息和知识的再利用,而不是促进了它们的再利用。在目前的制度下,智力作品从创作的那一刻起就被认为是完美的、自我维持的人工制品。任何修改、衍生和累积的添加都必须获得预防性的批准,并且必须偿还,就好像它们是对社会的滋扰一样。在网络时代的黎明,重读美学史尤其具有启发性。前现代创造力的共享动态与数字网络创造力的特征是平行的。与口头公式化传统一样,数字创意将其指数级的生成能力与无处不在的参与性贡献重新联系起来。此外,公式——被使用和重复使用、工作和再工作的单一单元——是混合文化和口头公式传统的基石。今天,在一个网络化的大规模协作、无处不在的在线粉丝社区、基于用户的创造力、数字模因和混合文化的时代,不断扩大的版权范式带来的知识封闭更加强烈。因此,我建议应该重新发现创造力和作者身份的公共、累积、社会和协作性质,并推动我们的政策。为了为我的案子辩护,我请求了最意想不到的证人的支持。
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Rediscovering Cumulative Creativity From the Oral Formulaic Tradition to Digital Remix: Can I Get a Witness?, 13 J. Marshall Rev. Intell. Prop. L. 341 (2014)
For most of human history, the essential nature of creativity was understood to be cumulative and collective. This notion has been largely forgotten by modern policies that regulate creativity and speech. As hard as it may be to believe, the most valuable components of our immortal culture were created under a fully open regime with regard to access to pre-existing expressions and reuse. From the Platonic mimesis to Shakespeare’s “borrowed feathers,” the largest part of our culture has been produced under a paradigm in which imitation — even plagiarism — and social authorship formed constitutive elements of the creative moment. Pre-modern creativity spread from a continuous line of re-use and juxtaposition of pre-existing expressive content, transitioning from orality to textuality and then melding the two traditions. The cumulative and collaborative character of the oral formulaic tradition dominated the development of epic literature. The literary pillars of Western culture, the Iliad and the Odyssey, were fully forged in the furnace of that tradition. Later, under the aegis of Macrobius’ art of rewriting and the Latin principles of imitatio, medieval epics grew out of similar dynamics of sharing and recombination of formulas and traditional patterns. Continuations, free re-use, and the re-modeling of iconic figures and characters, such as King Arthur and Roland, made chansons de geste and romance literature powerful vehicles in propelling cross-country circulation of culture.The parallelism between past and present highlights the incapacity of the present copyright system to recreate the cumulative and collaborative creative process that proved so fruitful in the past. In particular, the constant development and recursive use of iconic characters, which served as an engine for creativity in epic literature, is but a fading memory. This is because our policies for creativity are engineered in a fashion that stymies the re-use of information and knowledge, rather than facilitating it. Under the current regime, intellectual works are supposedly created as perfect, self-sustaining artifacts from the moment of their creation. Any modifications, derivations, and cumulative additions must secure preventive approval and must be paid off, as if they were nuisances to society.Rereading the history of aesthetics is particularly inspiring at the dawn of the networked age. The dynamics of sharing of pre-modern creativity parallel the features of digital networked creativity. As in the oral-formulaic tradition, digital creativity reconnects its exponential generative capacity to the ubiquity of participatory contributions. Additionally, the formula — the single unit to be used and reused, worked and re-worked — is the building block of the remix culture as well as the oral formulaic tradition. Today, in an era of networked mass collaboration, ubiquitous online fan communities, user-based creativity, digital memes, and remix culture, the enclosure of knowledge brought about by an ever-expanding copyright paradigm is felt with renewed intensity. Therefore, I suggest that the communal, cumulative, social and collaborative nature of creativity and authorship should be rediscovered and should drive our policies. In order to plead my case, I have asked for the support of the most unexpected witnesses.
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