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Original Information

Originality is the aspect of created or invented works by as being new or novel, and thus can be distinguished from reproductions, clones, forgeries, or derivative works. know it was invented by Romanticism,[1] with a notion that is often called romantic originality.[2][3][4]

The concept of originality is culturally contingent. It became an ideal in Western culture starting from the 18th century.[5][6] In contrast, at the time of Shakespeare it was common to appreciate more the similarity with an admired classical work, and Shakespeare himself avoided "unnecessary invention".[5][7][8]

Contents

Originality in law

In law, originality has become an important legal concept with respect to intellectual property, where creativity and invention have manifest as copyrightable works.

Original idea

An original idea is one not thought up by another person beforehand. Sometimes two or more people can come up with the same idea independently.

Original Recording

An original painting, photographic negative, analog audio or video recording, will contain qualities that can be difficult, or under current technology may be impossible to copy in its full integrity. That can also apply for any other artifact.

That is why it is often necessary to preserve the original, in order to preserve its original integrity. The copy is made to preserve the original recording by saving the original from degenerating as it is being played, rather than to replace the original.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Gregory (1997) pp. 12-13 quote:

    Modernist concern with issues of originality develops out of modernism's relation to romanticism, the romantics having invented the notion of originality as we know it.

  2. ^ Smith (1924)
  3. ^ Waterhouse (1926)
  4. ^ Macfarlane (2007)
  5. ^ a b Lynch, Jack (2002) The Perfectly Acceptable Practice of Literary Theft: Plagiarism, Copyright, and the Eighteenth Century, in Colonial Williamsburg: The Journal of the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation 24, no. 4 (Winter 2002–3), pp. 51–54. Also available online since 2006 at Writing World.
  6. ^ Edward Young (1759) Conjectures on Original Composition
  7. ^ Royal Shakespeare Company (2007) The RSC Shakespeare - William Shakespeare Complete Works, Introduction to the Comedy of Errors, p. 215 quote:

    while we applaud difference, Shakespeare's first audiences fovoured likeness: a work was good not because it was original, but because it resembled an admired classical exemplar, which in the case of comedy meant a play by Terence or Plautus

  8. ^ Lindey, Alexander (1952) Plagiarism and Originality

References

External links

Appropriation in the Arts
By field
In music Appropriation (music) · Contrafact · Cover version · Interpolation (music) · List of musical medleys · Mashup (music) · Musical plagiarism · Musical quotation · Parody music · Pasticcio · Plunderphonics · Potpourri (music) · DJ mix · Quodlibet · Remix · Sampling (music) · Sound collage · Trope (music) · Variation (music)
Literature, Theatre Assemblage (composition) · Cut-up technique · Hack (comedy) · Joke thievery · Pastiche · Trope (literature) · Found poetry · Verbatim theatre · Signifyin(g)
Painting, Comics, Photography Collage · Swipe (comics) · Comic strip switcheroo · Photographic mosaic · Combine painting · Mitate-e
Cinema, TV, videos Mashup (video) · Re-cut trailer · TV format · Found footage · Remake · Parody film
Standard blocks and forms Jazz standard · Stock character · Plot device · Dramatic structure · Formula fiction · Monomyth · Archetype
General concepts Imitation (art) · Plagiarism · Reprise · Détournement · Adaptation (Film adaptation, Theatrical adaptation, Literary adaptation) · Source criticism in the arts · Parody · Quotation · Homage · Citation · Allusion · Derivative work · Bricolage · Assemblage (art) · Found art
Related artistic concepts Originality · Artistic inspiration · Afflatus · Genius (literature) · Genre · Genre studies · Parody advertisement · In-joke · Tribute act · Fan fiction · Simulacrum · Intertextuality · Archetypal literary criticism · Readymades of Marcel Duchamp · Anti-art · Pop art · Aesthetic interpretation · Mitate
Epoch-marking works L.H.O.O.Q. (1919) · Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote (1939)
Theorization Mimesis · Dionysian imitatio · De Copia Rerum · Romantic movement · Modernist movement · Postmodern movement
Related non artistic concepts Cultural appropriation · Appropriation (sociology) · Articulation (sociology) · Trope (linguistics) · Academic dishonesty · Authorship · Genius

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Noun

origìnāl m. (Cyrillic spelling оригѝна̄л)
  1. original
Declension declension of original singular plural nominative origìnāl originali genitive originála originala dative originalu originalima accusative original originale vocative originale originali locative originalu originalima instrumental originalom originalima

from: Wiktionary: original,
Wed May 2 16:15:13 2012