F. Scott Fitzgerald Made $8,397 On Great Gatsby; His Daughter Gets $500,000 Per Year From It
from the just-as-Jefferson-intended? dept
There have been an increasing number of
questions raised
about both the length of copyright and the fact that it passes on to
heirs after the original creator passes on. The original purpose of
copyright had nothing to do with creating a welfare system for the
children of content creators, no matter how much some content creators
would like it to work that way. Economist Greg Mankiw
points out a "factoid" that drives home the oddity that comes from such long copyrights:
Royalties from The Great Gatsby totaled only $8,397 during Fitzgerald's
lifetime. Today Gatsby is read in nearly every high school and college
and regularly produces $500,000 a year in [F. Scott Fitzgerald's
daughter] Scottie's trust for her children.
The article this comes from goes into
great detail into F. Scott Fitzgelald's earnings
over his lifetime, and what's striking is that with a different sort of
copyright system in place, he barely seems to rely on copyright
royalties at all to make money. Instead -- like most jobs -- he
recognizes he needs to keep producing new works to earn money, selling
stories to various publications, along with working for Hollywood
studios in addition to his novels. How much things have changed.
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