Clash of the Remixers

David Shields, professor of English at the University of Washington and author of the new novel Reality Hunger: A Manifesto, is one of many on the forefront of what could be called “the appropriation controversy.” Interviewed by Randy Kennedy for the New York Times, Shields speaks and writes in defense of a growing trend within the arts that makes use of the remix to transform old ideas into new ones. Appropriation, in essence, is taking something that was and turning it into something it wasn’t. He writes:
“My intent is to write the ars poetica for a burgeoning group of interrelated (but unconnected) artists in a multitude of forms and media… who are breaking larger and larger chunks of ‘reality’ into their work. (Reality, as Nabokov never got tired of reminding us, is the one work that is meaningless without quotation marks.)” (1)
Shields writes on behalf of artists like fellow novelist Helene Hegemann and the mash-up artist Gregg Gillis, also known as Girl Talk, who make use of materials in the public domain – songs and writings that form particular aspects of a subjective reality – and blend them together into new expressions that reflect their own creativity. The ongoing controversy centers on whether or not this practice of appropriation, especially in the realm of copyright, is legally justifiable. The questions now become: How can one defend the use of someone else’s intellectual property in another’s work? What limits should be imposed on the artist, especially now in the age of the Internet? As Marybeth Peters says in Brett Gaylor’s open source documentary “RiP!: A Remix Manifesto,” the answer will always depend on whose the work is and how upset they are. However, set within a balanced framework that benefits both those creating and those consuming, appropriation can become a vital part of culture as we recognize appropriation as a tool used actively by the mainstream and those outside it.
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