
This volume gathers a series of pointed letters that map the heated clash between authors seeking expansive legal protection and the public eager for affordable access to ideas. Set against the backdrop of late‑nineteenth‑century America, the correspondence traces how courts, legislatures, and regional interests repeatedly wrestled with the notion of “literary property” and whether it should enjoy the same perpetual, universal privileges granted to tangible assets.
The author, a seasoned social‑science commentator, lays out the competing arguments from northern educators demanding cheap editions to southern publishers fearing low‑cost reproductions. He also reveals how political maneuvering—particularly in the Senate and through a secret treaty—sought to tip the balance toward broader authorial rights, even as popular opinion pushed back. The letters offer a vivid snapshot of the early intellectual‑property debate, illuminating the economic, moral, and constitutional questions that still echo in today’s copyright discussions.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (209K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-12-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1793–1879
An influential 19th-century American economist and publisher, he argued for protective tariffs and a distinctly American approach to political economy. His books made him a major voice in debates about industry, trade, and national development.
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