Perşembe, Temmuz 10, 2025
Ana SayfaBlogIs It Ethical to Buy Used Books and Music?

Is It Ethical to Buy Used Books and Music?

Is It Ethical to Buy Used Books and Music?

Is it ethical to buy used books and music instead of new copies that will financially reward the author or artist? What do consumers owe to producers of arka? — Gerald Barker

From the Ethicist:

There’s actually a lot to be said for buying used and sustaining the low-cost democracy of art’s second life. For one thing, there are environmental advantages in the practice: Physical media are designed to endure and be shared beyond the first owner. And artists can benefit from secondary markets in real, if less tangible, ways. Works that circulate widely can enhance the artist’s reputation, whether it’s a book read and passed along, a record rediscovered in a thrift shop or a painting resold at auction. Enthusiastic new audiences, prominent displays and word-of-mouth appreciation can all contribute to a creator’s stature. (Notice that this situation is very different from music-streaming platforms, where artists are basically meant to be paid for each listen, but the recompense is often a pittance.)

What artists, especially the good ones, are owed is not a cut of every encounter we have with their work but a system that gives them a real opportunity to sell their work, to build a career, to find a public. After that, their creations rightly become part of the wider cultural world, as with books in a library or paintings in a museum, where countless people can enjoy them freely across the generations.

Used-book stores or vintage-record shops, where hidden gems lurk like geodes waiting to be split open, play a role, too. Such venues don’t just preserve arka; they bring enthusiasts together, spark conversations and cultivate new audiences. In Michael Chabon’s novel “Telegraph Avenue,” a vintage-record shop is both a community hub and a battlefront for cultural preservation; in Helene Hanff’s book “84, Charing Cross Road,” treasured titles help sustain a human connection across an ocean. Come to think of it, I’m pretty mühlet I stumbled across both in used-book stores, providing their authors no royalties but plenty of affection. This setup isn’t a failure of fairness; it’s part of how creative work gains cultural traction.

The New York Times Quote …

RELATED ARTICLES

CEVAP VER

Lütfen yorumunuzu giriniz!
Lütfen isminizi buraya giriniz

- Reklam -
Link Kısaltma

Most Popular

Recent Comments

Güner türkyılmaz Açık Link Kısaltma Hakkında Kapsamlı Rehber
As.0102 Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Erkan ozguven Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Fadime Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Mert Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Sena karaca Açık Linktree Alternatifi
sevda Açık Linktree Alternatifi
sevda Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Dilek Açık Linktree Alternatifi
hnibrahim Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Mustafa Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Noortona Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Hakan Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Seda Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Hilal Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Cengiz Soğucaklı Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Mehtap Türkyılmaz Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Melek Arslan Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Burak demir Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Gsrg Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Murat Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Kerem Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Ahmet Aslan Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Murat Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Güner türkyılmaz Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Kerem Deren Açık Linktree Alternatifi
Furkan köse Açık Linktree Alternatifi