Just came across a brilliant copyright notice penned by the son of
Louis Zukofsky. Among its finer moments is one passage in which he
plainly discourages the reader from studying his father's works and
another in which he threatens to sue graduate students who do not heed
his warning.

http://www.z-site.net/copyright-notice-by-pz/

Can anyone recommend similarly atypical copyright notices?

Kevin

--

Full text:

Copyright Notice by PZ  

from Paul Zukofsky


TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN

Far too many people, especially perhaps-innocent grad. students, have
been misled into thinking that, in terms of quoting LZ or CZ, they may
do what they want, and do not have to worry about me. These people are
then suddenly faced with the reality of an irascible, recalcitrant
MOI, and are confronted with the very real prospect of years of work
potentially down the tubes. I therefore wish to post an obvious "do
not trespass" sign where LZ aficionados may see it.

All Louis and Celia Zukofsky is still copyright, and will remain so
for many many years. I own all of these copyrights, and they are my
property, and I insist upon deriving income from that property. For
those of you convinced that LZ would find my stance abhorrent, the
truth is that he kept all copyrights (initially in his name) as he had
the rather absurd idea that said copyrights would be sufficient to
allow for the economic survival of my mother, and their son. My stance
is congruent with that hope.

Despite what you may have been told, you may not use LZ’s words as you
see fit, as if you owned them, while you hide behind the rubric of
“fair use”. “Fair use” is a very-broadly defined doctrine, of which I
take a very narrow interpretation, and I expect my views to be
respected. We can therefore either more or less amicably work out the
fees that I demand; you can remove all quotation; or we can turn the
matter over to lawyers, this last solution being the worst of the
three, but one which I will use if I need to enforce my rights.

In general, as a matter of principle, and for your own well-being, I
urge you to not work on Louis Zukofsky, and prefer that you do not.
Working on LZ will be far more trouble than it is worth. You will be
far more appreciated working on some author whose copyright holder(s)
will actually cherish you, and/or your work. I do not, and no one
should work under those conditions. However, if you have no choice in
the matter, here are the procedures that I insist upon, and what you
must do if you wish to spare yourself as much grief as possible.

1-- people who want to do their dissertation on LZ, or want to quote
from him in their diss., must, if only as a common courtesy, inform me
of their desire to use this material, and obtain my permission to do
so. If you do that, and if I agree, the permission will be only for
the purposes of the diss. and there will be no charge for limited use
within the diss. You will not be allowed to distribute the diss.
publicly. Distribution via on-line publication is not allowed. I urge
you to keep quotation to a minimum, as the more quotation, the less
likely I am to grant permission.

2-- people who quote Louis Zukofsky in their dissertations without
having had the courtesy to request my permission, and who do so
without having obtained my permission to quote LZ, do not have
permission to use LZ quotations, and will, in the future, be refused
all permission to quote any and all LZ in their future publications,
and I promise to do my utmost to hamper, hinder, and preferably
prevent all such quotation.

3-- people who obtain copies of LZ manuscripts, marginalia, etc. etc.
such as at UTexas or elsewhere, and who have not first requested and
received my permission to have such copies made, will thereafter be
refused permission to use any such materials in any of their future
publications. Note that fair use is far more restrictive on
unpublished material than on already published material.

4-- people who wish to perform LZ or CZ (“A-24”; the “Masque” etc)
require performance rights from me. A fee will be charged. People who
wish to set LZ to music also require permission to do so.

5-- I forbid so-called electronic "publication". People may not quote
LZ in their "blogs".

6-- if you proceed to the point of publishing articles in journals,
books etc, or if you publish a book, you must obtain my permission to
quote, and fees will be charged. Once again I urge you to quote as
little as possible. That will minimize your cost.

Final points.

I can perhaps understand your misguided interest in literature, music,
art, etc. I would be suspicious of your interest in Louis Zukofsky,
but might eventually accept it. I can applaud your desire to obtain a
job, any job, although why in your chosen so-called profession is
quite beyond me; but one line you may not cross i.e. never never ever
tell me that your work is to be valued by me because it promotes my
father. Doing that will earn my life-long permanent enmity. Your
self-interest(s) I may understand, perhaps even agree with; but beyond
that, in the words of e.e.cummings quoting Olaf: “there is some s I
will not eat”.

Next, other than for the following, I am not trying to censor you. I
hardly give a damn what is said about my father (I am far more
protective of my mother) as long as the name is spelled properly, and
the fees are paid. My interest is almost purely economic. That being
said, I do not approve of delving into the personal lives of my
parents. If you wish to spend your time worrying if LZ did or did not
shtupp alligators, that is your problem, but I will not approve
quotation. That is not scholarship. That is gossip, and beneath
contempt.

Third, do not lie, or try to dissemble. If I ask for something, and
you agree, be certain that you do it. If I find out after the fact
that you have not, there will be trouble.

Finally, when all else fails, and you remain hell-bent on quoting LZ,
but you really, really REALLY do not want to deal with me, or you have
been stupidly advised to try to circumvent me -- remind yourself again
and again, and yet once more, what Lyndon Baines Johnson’s said about
J. Edgar Hoover i.e.: “I’d rather have him inside the tent pissing
out, than outside pissing in”.

PZ

Hong Kong

Sept. 17, 2009
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