[NetBehaviour] Guy Debord's Widow Threatens NYU Professor with Copyright Violation
marc garrett
marc.garrett at furtherfield.org
Thu May 1 18:31:34 CEST 2008
Guy Debord's Widow Threatens NYU Professor with Copyright Violation
Professor Is Accused of Infringing the Copyright of a Man Who Opposed
Copyright
By ANDREA L. FOSTER, http://chronicle.com/weekly/v54/i33/33a01603.htm
Guy Debord, a Marxist philosopher who died in 1994, was no fan of
private property. But apparently his widow is one.
A lawyer representing the widow, Alice Becker-Ho, has threatened
Alexander R. Galloway, an associate professor of culture and
communication at New York University, with legal action. Mr. Galloway
says the lawyer has sent him a letter demanding that he stop
distributing his online war game, which the lawyer says infringes a
copyright held by the Debord estate. The French philosopher had created
a similar board game 30 years ago.
But copyrights and some forms of intellectual property were anathema to
Debord, says Mr. Galloway. The Situationist International movement,
which Debord founded, in 1957, is a mix of anarchism and Marxism. Its
followers scrawled "Abolish copyright" on walls during the May 1968
student uprisings in Paris.
The humor in defending the property rights of Debord, a Marxist, has not
been lost on scholars, who have publicized the case on their blogs.
Mr. Galloway does not deny that the two-person computer game he
developed is based on Debord's creation, the Game of War. The
philosopher, an avid student of war strategy, released a few handcrafted
copies of the board game in 1978. The object of the game, which
resembles chess, is to corner and destroy opposing pieces. Debord and
his wife wrote a book about it that was translated into English last year.
One of Debord's games, cast in silver and copper, is on display at
Columbia University's Buell Center for the Study of Architecture,
alongside Mr. Galloway's computer version, called Kriegspiel. The object
of Kriegspiel, German for a generic 18th-century war game, is the same
as in Debord's game.
A computer programmer, Mr. Galloway says he spent about a year designing
the digital game, which can be downloaded from the Web at no charge.
"It's part of my scholarly research into how antagonism is simulated in
war games and computer games," he said. "It's also part of my research
into the work of Debord."
more...
http://info.interactivist.net/node/10947
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