ABSTRACT

Piracy and Intellectual Property in Latin America is the first sustained effort to present an alternative framework for understanding piracy and contemporary challenges to global discourses on intellectual property (IP) in the Americas.

While piracy might just look like theft and derivative reproduction from the perspective of many right-holders, the contributors to this volume go beyond this economic-driven logic and show how practices of copying are in fact practices of reinvention that reflect the rich social networks and forms of creativity, authorship, commerce, and consumption that characterize informal economies. From a perspective informed by contemporary scenarios in Mexico, Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Peru, Guatemala, and the United States, they engage in a discussion of alternatives that—predicated on the importance of protecting culture—allow for other ways of conceiving prosperity at local, national, regional, and global levels. Examples discussed include video games, clothing, trinkets, music, film, TV, and books.

Designed to help understand the broader implications of IP and piracy for the field of Latin American studies, this book will be a major contribution to Global South studies, as well as to the growing bibliography on globalization, informal markets, and piracy.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|20 pages

How Trinkets Became Counterfeits

Value and Intellectual Property in a Low-Income Market in Brazil

chapter 2|19 pages

The Piracy Problem

Indigeneity, Hybridity, and the Racial Politics of IP Enforcement in Guatemala

chapter 4|20 pages

Piracy as Media Practice

The Informal Market of Music and Videos in Peru

chapter 7|19 pages

From Piracy as a Crime to Piracy as a Necessity

Territorial Inequalities and the Socially Necessary Market in Brazil

chapter 10|19 pages

Between Abundance and Appropriation

Indeterminate Critiques of Global IP Schemes

chapter 11|16 pages

The Creative Copy

Agency and Fashion at a Market for Counterfeited Garments