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14 Am. U. J. Gender Soc. Pol'y & L. 551 (2006)
Fair Use and the Fairer Sex: Gender, Feminism, and Copyright Law

handle is hein.journals/ajgsp14 and id is 559 raw text is: FAIR USE AND THE FAIRER SEX:
GENDER, FEMINISM, AND
COPYRIGHT LAW
ANN BARTOW*
In troduction  ......................................................................................... 55 1
I. Gender and  Copyright Law   .............................................................. 554
II. Fair Use, Fairness, and  Gender ....................................................... 559
III. Feminism  and  Copyright Law  ........................................................ 564
A. Should the Explicit Substantive Coverage of Copyright Law
be  Expanded?   ..................................................................... 565
B. Should The Application of Existing Copyright Law Be
A ltered ?  ............................................................................... 566
C. Should Women Increasingly Commodify Their Creative
Output Through Current Copyright Law? ........................ 569
IV. Injecting Gender and Feminism into the Cultural Copyright
D iscou rse  .................................................................................... 569
A. W om  en  as Authors .................................................................... 570
B. W om en  as Interm ediaries ......................................................... 578
C. W om en  as Consum  ers ............................................................... 580
C on clusion  ........................................................................................... 583
INTRODUCTION
Copyright laws are written and enforced to help certain groups of
people, largely male, assert and retain control over the resources
generated by creative productivity.       Consequently, the copyright
* Associate Professor of Law, University of South Carolina School of Law. An earlier
version of this paper was presented at the IP/Gender: The Unmapped Connections
Symposium at American University's Washington College of Law on April 15, 2005.
The author thanks Peter Jaszi, Ann Shalleck, Christine Haight Farley, Victoria
Phillips, Josh Sarnoff, and The American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy
& the Law for encouraging this research and the Glushko-Samuelson Intellectual
Property Clinic for helping to support it (with profound thanks to Pam Samuelson
and Bob Glushko for their generosity and commitment to social justice). This article
is dedicated to Casey Bartow-McKenney and to feminist legal scholars everywhere.
551

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