ENG 333
English majors! Which book is best?
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Monday, April 14, 2014
Credits and Creative Rights for DMP2
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Credits
and Creative Rights
Disclaimer: All of the sources included in this remix adhere to established
guidelines on Creative Rights. Materials used are in the Public Domain or
licensed through Creative Commons. Items included in remix that fall under
copyright protection follow established guidelines on Fair Use, especially
those published in the “Documentary Filmmaker’s Guidelines for Best Practices
in Fair Use,” which include: 1) a proper attribution, 2) take material from a
range of sources rather than just one, 3) use of only a small part of source,
no more than necessary, and 4) doesn’t include quoted material to avoid cost of
shooting similar footage. Attribute where the clip came from (either on screen
or in the credits)
Materials labeled “Public Domain” include: 1) creative works for which copyright protection has expired, 2) for pre-1978n works, works that lost copyright protection due to failure to comply with legal obligations, 3) works produced by the U.S. government, and 4) works published before 1923. Public domain works may be used freely, in any form, without the permission of the former copyright owner.
Materials labeled with “Creative Commons” license most often hold “Share Alike” and “Attribution” CC licenses, which means that others may remix and build upon the creator’s work. Creative Commons licenses can also specify if works may or may not be used for commercial purposes (the choice is up to the original creator when they create the license
Materials labeled “Fair Use” appear to be subject to copyright projection but pass for Fair Use because they fit the following stipulations: 1) the unlicensed use "transforms" the original material taken from the copyrighted work, using it for a different purpose than that of the original, 2) the material is taken in appropriate kind and amount, given the nature of the copyrighted work, 3) the use has no economic effect upon the original work.
TEXT
Tarpley, Fred.
“Margaret Berry Legendary Dean of Women.” Memories of Old E.T.. Ed. Silver Leos Writers Guild. Commerce: Silver Leos Writers Guild,
2010. 58-61. Print. <Fair Use>
Reynolds, Donald E., and James H. Conrad. Professor
Mayo's College : A History Of East Texas State University / By Donald E.
Reynolds ; With Illustrations By James H. Conrad. n.p.: Commerce, Tex. : East
Texas State University Press, 1993., 1993. LION Catalog. Web. 26 Feb. 2014.
<Fair Use>
MUSIC
Duckett. “Another Girl (Instrumental)”. 2013,
CCMIXTER.ORG. Web. 6 April 2014. <Creative Commons>
IMAGES
“1955 Locust_54.” Locust Yearbook Collection,
Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M
University-Commerce. 1955. <Fair Use>
“1955 Locust_239.” Locust Yearbook Collection, Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M University-Commerce. 1955. <Fair Use>
“1955 Locust_60.” Locust Yearbook Collection, Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M University-Commerce. 1955. <Fair Use>
“1960 Locust_138.” Locust Yearbook Collection, Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M University-Commerce. 1960. <Fair Use>
“1960 Locust_118.” Locust Yearbook Collection, Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M University-Commerce. 1960. <Fair Use>
“1960 Locust_215.” Locust Yearbook Collection, Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M University-Commerce. 1960. <Fair Use>
“2_Western Week, 1972.” Digital Collections: Historic ET Collection. JPG Image. 6 April, 2014. <Fair Use>
“Greased Pig Contest, circa 1955.” Digital Collections: Historic ET Collection. JPG Image. 6 April, 2014.
“Mock Western Lynching.” Digital Collections: Historic ET Collection. JPG Image. 5 March, 2014. <Fair Use>
Reynolds, Donald E., and James H. Conrad. Professor Mayo's College : A History Of East Texas State University / By Donald E. Reynolds ; With Illustrations By James H. Conrad. p. 128: Commerce, Tex. : East Texas State University Press, 1993., 1993. LION Catalog. Web. 05 March 2014. <Fair Use>
“Tobacco Spitting Contest- Gloria Jenkins.” Digital
Collections: Historic ET Collection. JPG Image. March 5th, 2014. <Fair
Use>
VIDEO
Iowa State Teachers College. “The Home Economics
Story.” Internet Archives. 1951. <Public
Domain>
Encyclopedia Brittanica Films. “Office Etiquette.” Internet Archives. 1950.
<Public Domain>
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Monday, March 24, 2014
Fair Use in my Photoessay
- “1955 Locust_54.” Locust Yearbook Collection, Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M University-Commerce. 1955.
- I claim the use of this photograph as Fair Use because I am using it to create something new for educational purposes. This photograph is part of the Locust Yearbook Collection from the Northeast Texas Digital Collections. I am using this as a single image in part of a series of images to tell the story of Margaret Berry, so the nature of the use is different from its original intent and the extent of the use is not great. Also, there is no economic effect since I am not profiting from the use and the yearbook is not losing profits because of my use.
- “1955 Locust_239.” Locust Yearbook Collection, Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M University-Commerce. 1955.
- I claim the use of this photograph in my photoessay to be Fair Use because I’m using it in a transformative way that differs from its original purpose. I am using it to tell the story of E.T. Dean of Women, Margaret Berry. I have also provided proper citation for this image in my photoessay, as well as for each and every image included in my photoessay.
- “Tobacco Spitting Contest- Gloria Jenkins.” Digital Collections: Historic ET Collection. JPG Image. March 5th, 2014.
- I claim the inclusion of this photograph in my photoessay to be Fair Use because it meets all of the “four factors” which judges generally consider in fair use litigation. My purpose for reappropriating this image is different from its original intent as part of the Historic ET Digital Collections. Also, my use will have no economic effect upon the collection. The extent of my use is minimal, and I’ve provided a proper citation for my source.
- “Mock Western Lynching.” Digital Collections: Historic ET Collection. JPG Image. March 5th, 2014.
- I claim the inclusion of this photograph in my photoessay to be Fair Use because it also meets the “four factors” judges generally consider in fair use litigation. As a student, I’ve used the photo in a transformative way for educational purposes. The source is properly cited in my essay, in accordance with Best Practices for Fair Use. Also, I am not profiting from its use, nor is the collection suffering economically due to this use.
- “1955 Locust_60.” Locust Yearbook Collection, Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M University-Commerce. 1955.
- I claim the inclusion of this photograph in my photoessay to be Fair Use. This is another image taken from the Locust Yearbook Collection, part of Northeast Texas Digital Collections. I am using it for a different purpose, the use is minimal, there is no economic effect, and I’ve included a citation for my original source.
- “1955 Locust_239.” Locust Yearbook Collection, Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M University-Commerce. 1955.
- I claim the inclusion of this photograph as Fair use because I am using it as a student in an academic setting for the purpose of telling the story of an individual woman included in this yearbook. My purpose is transformative and there is no economic impact. I have also provided a citation, crediting the Northeast Texas Digital Collections.
- “1960 Locust_138.” Locust Yearbook Collection, Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M University-Commerce. 1960.
- I claim the inclusion of this photograph as Fair Use because I am using the image to create something original. This is yet another image from the Locust Yearbook Collection, which I have taken a few images from, yet the extent of my use is still minimal as I am using only a handful of images out of thousands. My use causes no economic effect, and the source has been properly credited.
- “1960 Locust_118.” Locust Yearbook Collection, Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M University-Commerce. 1960.
- I claim the inclusion of this photograph to be Fair Use because I’ve used it to create something new and original, with a different purpose than the original source. The nature of my use is therefore different, and the extent is obviously minimal as I am only using minimal bits and pieces of the Yearbook Collection, such as this image, and remixing them to create something new for educational purposes. I’ve also provided a proper citation and my use is neither making profits nor taking profits from anyone.
- Reynolds, Donald E., and James H. Conrad. Professor Mayo's College : A History Of East Texas State University / By Donald E. Reynolds ; With Illustrations By James H. Conrad. p. 128: Commerce, Tex. : East Texas State University Press, 1993., 1993. LION Catalog. Web. 05 March 2014.
- I claim the inclusion of this image in my photoessay to be Fair Use. This image is from “Professor Mayo’s College,” which provides an in-depth history of the university. My use of the image, on the other hand, is to tell the story of an individual, Margaret Berry. The nature of my use is different, the extent is very minimal, and there is no economic impact.
- “1960 Locust_215.” Locust Yearbook Collection, Northeast Texas Digital Collections, James G. Gee Library, Texas A&M University-Commerce. 1960.
- I claim the inclusion of this image in my photoessay to be Fair Use. This image is another taken from the Locust Yearbook Collection and used for a purpose which differs from the source, that of telling Margaret Berry’s story by creating an original and educational photoessay. There is no economic effect caused by my use, the extent of my use is minimal, and I’ve provided a citation, crediting the source.
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Margaret Berry, Legendary Dean of Women
Margaret Berry, Legendary Dean of Women, a set on Flickr.
DMP1- Photoessay on E.T. dean of women, Margaret Berry (1950-1961).
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
DMP1 Peer Review
Here is the link to my Flickr photoessay rough draft:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/115436186@N08/sets/72157641592378624/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/115436186@N08/sets/72157641592378624/
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)