ABSTRACT

Media literacy educators rely on the ability to make use of copyrighted materials from mass media, digital media and popular culture for both analysis and production activities. Whether they work in higher education, elementary and secondary schools, or in informal learning settings in libraries, community and non-profit organizations, educators know that the practice of media literacy depends on a robust interpretation of copyright and fair use. With chapters written by leading scholars and practitioners from the fields of media studies, education, writing and rhetoric, law and society, library and information studies, and the digital humanities, this companion provides a scholarly and professional context for understanding the ways in which new conceptualizations of copyright and fair use are shaping the pedagogical practices of media literacy.

part I|92 pages

Foundational Issues

chapter 2|9 pages

Mix and Match

Transformative Purpose in the Classroom

chapter 4|13 pages

Circumventing Barriers to Education

Educational Exemptions in the Triennial Rulemaking of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act

chapter 5|16 pages

Remix and Unchill

Remaking Pedagogies to Support Ethical Fair Use

part II|108 pages

Stakeholders in Copyright Education

chapter 7|14 pages

Copyright Literacy in the UK

Understanding Library and Information Professionals’ Experiences of Copyright

chapter 8|8 pages

Codes of Best Practices in Fair Use

Game Changers in Copyright Education

chapter 10|14 pages

Blurred Lines and Shifting Boundaries

Copyright and Transformation in the Multimodal Compositions of Teachers, Teacher Educators, and Future Media Professionals

chapter 12|14 pages

Youth, Bytes, Copyright

Talking to Young Canadian Creators About Digital Copyright

chapter 13|13 pages

Fair Use as Creative Muse

An Ongoing Case Study

chapter 14|19 pages

Digital Transformations in the Arts and Humanities

Negotiating the Copyright Landscape in the United Kingdom

part III|114 pages

Pedagogy of Media Education, Copyright, and Fair Use

chapter 16|17 pages

Teaching History With Film

Teaching About Film as History

chapter 17|22 pages

Perspectives on the Role of Instructional Video in Higher Education

Evolving Pedagogy, Copyright Challenges, and Support Models

chapter 18|16 pages

“I Got It From Google”

Recontextualizing Authorship to Strengthen Fair Use Reasoning in the Elementary Grades

part IV|14 pages

Past Is Prologue

chapter 22|12 pages

Copyright, Monopoly Games, and Pirates

The Past, Present, and Future of Copyright