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- Q7449586 subject Q449981.
- Q7449586 abstract "Semiotic democracy is a phrase first coined by John Fiske, a media studies professor, in his seminal media studies book Television Culture (1987). Fiske defined the term as the "delegation of the production of meanings and pleasures to [television's] viewers." Fiske discussed how rather than being passive couch potatoes that absorbed information in an unmediated way, viewers actually gave their own meanings to the shows they watched that often differed substantially from the meaning intended by the show's producer.Subsequently, this term was appropriated by the technical and legal community in the context of any re-working of cultural imagery by someone who is not the original author. Examples include fan fiction and slash fiction.Legal scholars are concerned that just as technology eases the process of cheaply making and distributing derivative works imbued with new cultural meanings available to wide public, copyright and right-to-publicity law is clamping down on and limiting these works, thus reducing their promulgation, and limiting semiotic democracy.Prof. Terry Fisher of Harvard Law School has written about semiotic democracy in the context of the crisis facing the entertainment industry and in terms of the ability of people to use the Internet in creative new ways.".
- Q7449586 wikiPageExternalLink papers.cfm?abstract_id=1015500.
- Q7449586 wikiPageWikiLink Q1075191.
- Q7449586 wikiPageWikiLink Q121594.
- Q7449586 wikiPageWikiLink Q15687022.
- Q7449586 wikiPageWikiLink Q165650.
- Q7449586 wikiPageWikiLink Q2518716.
- Q7449586 wikiPageWikiLink Q3045377.
- Q7449586 wikiPageWikiLink Q449981.
- Q7449586 wikiPageWikiLink Q461524.
- Q7449586 wikiPageWikiLink Q49122.
- Q7449586 wikiPageWikiLink Q705089.
- Q7449586 wikiPageWikiLink Q8019782.
- Q7449586 comment "Semiotic democracy is a phrase first coined by John Fiske, a media studies professor, in his seminal media studies book Television Culture (1987).".
- Q7449586 label "Semiotic democracy".