Soviet copyright law
Edward M Dumanis
dumanis at BUFFALO.EDU
Wed Mar 9 04:29:29 UTC 2005
I am not sure here why journal Moskva's publication is a starting point.
It was not a full version published at that time; it was cut by the
Soviet censors. The full version was first published in the West. Should
we count then from the time of the first western edition? And should then
Russia obey the same rules of counting?
Sincerely,
Edward Dumanis <dumanis at buffalo.edu>
On Tue, 8 Mar 2005, Janice Pilch wrote:
............/snip/....................
> Another interesting example is that of Bulgakov's The Master
> and Margarita, written in the years before Bulgakov's death
> in 1940, and first published in Moscow in the journal Moskva
> in 1966-67. The term of protection for posthumously published
> works in Russia is now 70 years from publication. This means
> that The Master and Margarita is protected in Russia through
> 2037. Since it was protected in Russia on January 1, 1996,
> the novel is protected in the U.S. for 95 years from
> publication, through 2062.
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