To G. G. Leveson-Gower, Earl Granville [before 19 April 1872]1
Memorial of British Authors to the Right Hon. Earl Granville, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, on the subject of Copyright in the United States.
Looking forward with satisfaction to the prospect of harmonious relations being happily established between the United States and the United Kingdom, we, the undersigned, hope for a reconsideration of the policy in virtue of which British authors, as authors, enjoy no rights which American citizens are bound to respect.2
Letters from influential Americans—one of them a leading New York publisher—which have recently appeared here, joined with the approval of them expressed in the journals of the United States, show the desire of the Americans for the conclusion of a Copyright Convention between their country and ours.3
We understand that the demands of publishers in this country have hitherto been the most formidable obstacles to the negotiation of a Copyright Convention. We are of opinion that the interests of our publishers in American copyrights are quite independent of the just claims of British authors; and that the latter may be fully admitted without recognition of the former. We think it would be a grave error if the settlement of this matter were retarded, or rendered impossible, in consequence of two classes of claims, which, in essence, are wholly distinct, if not antagonistic, being regarded by negotiators representing this country as identical and inseparable.
Americans distinguish between the author, as producing the ideas, and the publisher, as producing the material vehicle by which these ideas are conveyed to readers. They admit the claim of the British author to be paid by them for his brain-work. The claim of the British book-manufacturer, to a monopoly of their book-market, they do not admit. To give the British author a copyright is simply to agree that the American publisher shall pay him for work done. To give the British publisher a copyright is to open the American market to him on terms which prevent the American publisher from competing.
Without dwelling on the argument of the Americans that such an arrangement would not be free trade, but the negation of free trade, and merely noticing that further argument that, while their protective system raises the prices of all the raw materials, free competition with the British book-manufacturer would be fatal to the American book-manufacturer, it is clear that the Americans have strong reasons for refusing to permit the British publisher to share in the copyright which they are willing to grant to the British author.4
We venture to suggest, therefore, that, responding to the cordial feeling recently expressed by Americans on the subject, and duly appreciating the force of their reasons for making the above distinction, future negotiations should be conducted with a view to secure a copyright on the conditions they specify.
Without making it the foundation of a formal claim for reciprocity of treatment, we mention the fact, that American authors may, if they please, secure all the advantages of copyright in the United Kingdom which are enjoyed by native authors.
(Signed) HERBERT SPENCER (And 51 others.)5
Footnotes
Bibliography
Appleton, C. E. 1877. American efforts after international copyright. Fortnightly Review 21: 237–57.
Correspondence: The correspondence of Charles Darwin. Edited by Frederick Burkhardt et al. 29 vols to date. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1985–.
Seville, Catherine. 2006. The internationalisation of copyright law: books, buccaneers, and the black flag in the nineteenth century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Summary
Writes on behalf of British authors requesting improved copyright rights with respect to United States.
Letter details
- Letter no.
- DCP-LETT-8294F
- From
- Charles Robert Darwin
- To
- George Granville Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, 2d Duke of Sutherland
- Source of text
- Correspondence between the Foreign Office and Her Majesty’s representatives abroad, and foreign representatives in England, on the subject of copyright: 1872–75. House of Commons Parliamentary Papers session 1875 (1285) LXXVIII.233–4
- Physical description
- Memorial
Please cite as
Darwin Correspondence Project, “Letter no. 8294F,” accessed on 19 October 2024, https://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=letters/DCP-LETT-8294F.xml
Also published in The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, vol. 20