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dc.contributor.authorSimon, David A.
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-17T16:48:36Z
dc.date.available2025-01-17T16:48:36Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.identifier.citationDavid A Simon, Copyright, Moral Rights, and the Social Self, 35 YALE JL & HUMAN. 754 (2024).en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13051/18495
dc.descriptionVol. 35:4en_US
dc.description.abstractMoral rights—non-economic rights that enable authors to control how their copyrighted work is divulged, attributed, modified, and withdrawn—are grounded on the Investment Theory: when an author creates a work, she invests part of her self in it. Because the work is an extension of the author’s “self,” special rights—not merely economic rights—are needed to protect it. Although intuitive, the rationale raises two central questions any moral rights theorist must address: how can an author invest her “self” in a work, and how might the law protect this investment? Moral rights scholars have not provided a satisfactory answer to the first question, making the second one difficult to address. This Article argues that an idea from social psychology might help answer the first question and shape how we respond to the second. Rather than some philosophical or abstract conception of the self, the authorial self the law protects is the social one: the self created and maintained through social interaction. On this account, moral rights are tools to present and manage aspects of this social self. They are limited “rights of impression management.” This framing enables two analytical moves. First, it precisifies what moral rights protect (the social self as externalized in the work) and the harm they protect against (potential inconsistencies in that self). Second, it provides a framework for discussing how moral rights ought to protect the self from harm, raising the ultimate questions of whether and to what extent the Investment Theory is justified.en_US
dc.publisherYale Journal of Law & the Humanitiesen_US
dc.subjectCopyright; Intellectual property; Moral rights; Investment theoryen_US
dc.titleCopyright, Moral Rights, and the Social Selfen_US
rioxxterms.versionNAen_US
rioxxterms.typeJournal Article/Reviewen_US
refterms.dateFOA2025-01-17T16:48:38Z
refterms.dateFirstOnline2025


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