Ah, the Irony of Book of Mormon Satire...
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Ah, the Irony of Book of Mormon Satire...
Some of you might know that I've been working on a webcomic that satirizes LGT vis-a-vis traditional understandings of Book of Mormon. The point is certainly not to make fun of Latter-day Saints, or even the Book of Mormon itself, but to poke fun at what appears sometimes to be tortuous apologetic endeavors to reconcile perceived anachronisms in Book of Mormon while holding to the limited geography theory (especially Sorenson's model).
Last night I had an idea. Why not self-publish the comic through Lulu.com. It's pretty cheap to do so and I think it would be even cooler to have a printed version.
Problem: Lulu.com doesn't accept "fanfic" (fan fiction). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fan_fiction
While the 1830 Book of Mormon is not, I don't think, still "owned" by the LDS Church, they certainly hold the copyright on newer editions.
If I use Book of Mormon "characters" in my comic, am I producing fanfic? Does the LDS Church "own" the rights to Book of Mormon characters?
Ironically, if I think of the characters as historical people (rather than fictional characters) and I employ those historical folks in fictional form, the whole issue of fanfic is avoided. It would be no different than creating a comic about Abraham Lincoln, for example.
Can anyone add any insights on this matter?
Best.
CKS
Last night I had an idea. Why not self-publish the comic through Lulu.com. It's pretty cheap to do so and I think it would be even cooler to have a printed version.
Problem: Lulu.com doesn't accept "fanfic" (fan fiction). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fan_fiction
While the 1830 Book of Mormon is not, I don't think, still "owned" by the LDS Church, they certainly hold the copyright on newer editions.
If I use Book of Mormon "characters" in my comic, am I producing fanfic? Does the LDS Church "own" the rights to Book of Mormon characters?
Ironically, if I think of the characters as historical people (rather than fictional characters) and I employ those historical folks in fictional form, the whole issue of fanfic is avoided. It would be no different than creating a comic about Abraham Lincoln, for example.
Can anyone add any insights on this matter?
Best.
CKS
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cksalmon wrote:Some of you might know that I've been working on a webcomic that satirizes LGT vis-a-vis traditional understandings of Book of Mormon. The point is certainly not to make fun of Latter-day Saints, or even the Book of Mormon itself, but to poke fun at what appears sometimes to be tortuous apologetic endeavors to reconcile perceived anachronisms in Book of Mormon while holding to the limited geography theory (especially Sorenson's model).
Last night I had an idea. Why not self-publish the comic through Lulu.com. It's pretty cheap to do so and I think it would be even cooler to have a printed version.
Problem: Lulu.com doesn't accept "fanfic" (fan fiction). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fan_fiction
While the 1830 Book of Mormon is not, I don't think, still "owned" by the LDS Church, they certainly hold the copyright on newer editions.
If I use Book of Mormon "characters" in my comic, am I producing fanfic? Does the LDS Church "own" the rights to Book of Mormon characters?
Ironically, if I think of the characters as historical people (rather than fictional characters) and I employ those historical folks in fictional form, the whole issue of fanfic is avoided. It would be no different than creating a comic about Abraham Lincoln, for example.
Can anyone add any insights on this matter?
Best.
CKS
The Book of Zelph is published through Lulu. Not sure how he did it. It blatantly rips off ideas from the Book of Mormon, spoofs it, uses its characters, slanders its characters, and even copies the look and feel of the cover. Here's the website http://www.bookofzelph.com. I'm sure there's contact information somewhere. I would shoot him an email and find out how he got past the Lulu screeners.
"We of this Church do not rely on any man-made statement concerning the nature of Deity. Our knowledge comes directly from the personal experience of Joseph Smith." - Gordon B. Hinckley
"It's wrong to criticize leaders of the Mormon Church even if the criticism is true." - Dallin H. Oaks
"It's wrong to criticize leaders of the Mormon Church even if the criticism is true." - Dallin H. Oaks
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SatanWasSetUp wrote:cksalmon wrote:Some of you might know that I've been working on a webcomic that satirizes LGT vis-a-vis traditional understandings of Book of Mormon. The point is certainly not to make fun of Latter-day Saints, or even the Book of Mormon itself, but to poke fun at what appears sometimes to be tortuous apologetic endeavors to reconcile perceived anachronisms in Book of Mormon while holding to the limited geography theory (especially Sorenson's model).
Last night I had an idea. Why not self-publish the comic through Lulu.com. It's pretty cheap to do so and I think it would be even cooler to have a printed version.
Problem: Lulu.com doesn't accept "fanfic" (fan fiction). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fan_fiction
While the 1830 Book of Mormon is not, I don't think, still "owned" by the LDS Church, they certainly hold the copyright on newer editions.
If I use Book of Mormon "characters" in my comic, am I producing fanfic? Does the LDS Church "own" the rights to Book of Mormon characters?
Ironically, if I think of the characters as historical people (rather than fictional characters) and I employ those historical folks in fictional form, the whole issue of fanfic is avoided. It would be no different than creating a comic about Abraham Lincoln, for example.
Can anyone add any insights on this matter?
Best.
CKS
The Book of Zelph is published through Lulu. Not sure how he did it. It blatantly rips off ideas from the Book of Mormon, spoofs it, uses its characters, slanders its characters, and even copies the look and feel of the cover. Here's the website http://www.bookofzelph.com. I'm sure there's contact information somewhere. I would shoot him an email and find out how he got past the Lulu screeners.
Great tip. Thanks!
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Don't forget when writing about the Jaredites that they had the pure adamic language - don't put english where adamic should be.
also, I don't think there is a copy right on the characters because it's true history right? You could make a comic book about the revolutionary war and I don't think you need to get a clearance from the United States Government.
also, I don't think there is a copy right on the characters because it's true history right? You could make a comic book about the revolutionary war and I don't think you need to get a clearance from the United States Government.
I want to fly!
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Versions of the Book of Mormon that were published right up to 1923 or so are all in the public domain, so if you derive stories based on Book of Mormon characters, you can claim that these characters are in the public domain, and you'd be correct. Only the specific editions that come later are copyrighted, and it's the specific wording and typesetting and whatnot of those editions that is copyrighted, not the ideas or general storylines. I don't see why this should be a problem.
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen
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The text of the Book of Mormon is in the public domain, and anyone can do anything they want with it. All the stuff that is unique to the 1981 LDS edition (intro, footnotes, chapter headings, index, maps) is copyrighted by the LDS Church. Also, any unique changes to the text can be copyrighted.
So just download a copy of a public domain version of the Book of Mormon and go to town.
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/Mormon/browse.html
So just download a copy of a public domain version of the Book of Mormon and go to town.
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/Mormon/browse.html
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Believers would say that this would be writing based not on fictional book but on real people and real events. LDS author Orson Scott Card talked about thisbecause his Homecoming Series is based on the Book of Mormon.
So I'd argue it's "historical fiction" to some, and satire to others.
Phaedrus
So I'd argue it's "historical fiction" to some, and satire to others.
Phaedrus
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