Event Courses and Workshops A Celebration of American Creativity: The Early Copyright Records Collection

Date and Location

  • When: Thursday, October 7, 2021

    3:00 pm - 4:00 pm EDT

  • More information at zoomgov.com External.

  • Where: Online Only

Request ADA accommodations five business days in advance at (202) 707-6362 or ADA@loc.gov.

Please join RBSCD and the Copyright Office on October 7, 2021 from 3:00-4:30 for a lively discussion of early American copyright. This program is a celebration of new digital content now available on the Early Copyright Records Collection website, which includes books, sheet music, prints, maps, dramatic compositions, advertising labels, patent drawings, and much more from 1790 to 1870. You can also explore these fascinating documents more intimately by participating in our new By the People crowdsourcing campaign, American Creativity: Early Copyright Title Pages, also launching on October 7. Speakers for this event will include John Cole, Historian of the Library of Congress; Zvi Rosen, Legal Scholar of Copyright at the University of Southern Illinois, and George Thuronyi, Head of the Office of Public Information and Education at the United States Copyright Office. We look forward to seeing you there.

John Cole is the founding director of the Center for the Book and the Library of Congress Historian. He has published widely about books and libraries in society as well as about the history of the Library of Congress. John Cole will give a give a presentation on the fascinating life and times of Ainsworth Rand Spofford (1825-1908), 6th Librarian of Congress. Cole will lead us through Spofford’s early beginnings as a publisher in Cincinnati up through his impressive achievements accomplished as Librarian of Congress where he went on to make important contributions towards building the Library’s collections and establishing copyright at the Library of Congress.

Zvi Rosen, Assistant Professor at Southern Illinois School of Law and Copyright Scholar. Rosen was the 2015-2016 Abraham L. Kaminstein Scholar in Residence at the U.S. Copyright Office, and taught at Hofstra, the University of New Hampshire, and New York Law School as well Southern Illinois School of Law. He has written extensively on the historical development of copyright and trademark law in the United States, with a focus on the 19th and early 20th century. Rosen will discuss how newly digitized ledgers and title pages chronicles American publishing and tells the story of early copyright in the United States. Rosen will take the audience through the historic twists and turns of the establishment of U.S. Copyright law and discuss how these records were kept, maintained, and eventually transferred to the Library of Congress. He will walk through the structure of a pre-1870 copyright registration with a review of the format and forms used to regulate the process.

George Thuronyi, Head of the Office of Public Information and Education (PIE) at the United States Copyright Office. Thuronyi oversees PIE as it provides authoritative information about copyright law to the public by publishing comprehensive written and audiovisual materials, developing educational and informational programming, and responding to a wide variety of copyright and Copyright Office-related

inquiries. Thuronyi will follow up on Zvi Rosen's copyright law discussion and elaborate on the functions and offerings of the modern Copyright Office that has been part of the Library of Congress since 1870.