PERMISSION
So, a writer is struggling to write a
novel. Has lots of wonderful bits and pieces but nothing to hang them on. Then,
sitting in a car, waiting, the writer is visited by INSPIRATION in one of those
out of the blue lightning bolt moments. The writer finds the first line: two
short sentences, out of which the whole novel then grows and finds its central
character.
What is interesting here is that
‘inspiration moment’. It illustrates how the creative imagination works. The
writer, on thinking about that moment and the line that ‘just came’, later
feels some familiarity in the line that has been jotted down. Then, after some
searching, the writer finds that the line belongs to someone else and, with
only a different name, is exactly the same. Isn’t that borrowing just what the
creative brain does? Doesn’t that illustrate that a natural part of creativity
is borrowing? A lesser writer might not have been self-reflective enough to
discover where the line had come from. The same writer perhaps doesn’t
appreciate that much of what he has written has its roots in ‘other stuff’.
I don’t know if the writer then asked the
‘owner’ of the original for permission to use the line, those two short
sentences. But if the writer hadn’t, is this right? If the writer did, does
this make the line in that writer’s novel different? If the writer hadn’t ever
discovered the source for the inspiration-delivered line, is that an excuse for
not calling this theft?
Thinking about this only begins to
illustrate some of the problems of ownership of words or ownership of arrangements
of words. What about ideas?
Same writer, has an idea for a part of the
novel, something a character in the novel does. The writer is savvy enough to
see that this idea has come from a fellow writer’s work. So, publicly, our
writer asks this other writer to be able to use the idea. Ok says the kind
writer, giving permission for the idea to travel. Our writer completes the
novel and the borrowing is there, improved upon, made more wonderful than it
was when it was someone else’s idea. The ‘originator’ is not credited. Is there
something wrong here? Does permission mean that the borrowing is ok? Our
writer’s readers will now think the ideas in the novel belong to that writer
whose name is on the book. Is this ok? Is taking someone else’s ideas and using
them made legitimate by the politeness of asking permission?
If the answer to that last question is
‘yes’ then is plagiarism merely reduced to bad manners?
Just something to think about.
(I am not here talking about adding one’s
name to the actual work of another writer, taking another’s actual poem or actual story and
calling it one’s own and telling others that it is yours. I think the wrong that is there is easy to spot.)
(PS I am adding this link below having just listened to a fun TED talk about Inspiration and genius. Here's a link to it if you are interested. Although some of the examples of voices in the air and poems hurtling by driven on the wind are a bit fanciful, the notion that inspiration involves something outside of oneself interacting within oneself is an apt one for my discussion above. It also takes all praise or blame for the above sorts of inspired borrowing away from the artist. Oh, and I have made it a link you can just click on, cos that's easier for me to do now.)
http://www.ted.com/talks/elizabeth_gilbert_on_genius.html
(PS I am adding this link below having just listened to a fun TED talk about Inspiration and genius. Here's a link to it if you are interested. Although some of the examples of voices in the air and poems hurtling by driven on the wind are a bit fanciful, the notion that inspiration involves something outside of oneself interacting within oneself is an apt one for my discussion above. It also takes all praise or blame for the above sorts of inspired borrowing away from the artist. Oh, and I have made it a link you can just click on, cos that's easier for me to do now.)
http://www.ted.com/talks/elizabeth_gilbert_on_genius.html
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