Why Jim and I feel good about Theft…
An observation that took me all of 140 characters to pass on (using Twitter of course) was turned into a fairly substantial blog by another writer a few days ago. One of my Twitter followers noticed that blog, and immediately linked it to my earlier tweet. They asked me if I wasn’t annoyed that this guy had ‘stolen‘ my idea.
And you can quote me on that…
No. I was not annoyed.
Actually, it’s nice to inspire other people, I replied. And thinking further about this, I was only highlighting something that was tucked away in a long interview, but which, to me, seemed the most important fact from the interview - for a particular geographical audience. So my thought was not original in any way - I just focused on something already stated, which was very far from the headline - and just made it a headline item.
Rather than feeling annoyed, I was happy that I’d helped to highlight something important that might otherwise have been ignored. Another writer, who followed my tweet nothings, chose to write about something I mentioned in more detail. Cool. I treat that as a compliment - he recognised that my insight was valuable - but I certainly did not expect any acknowledgment. Next time we talk, I’ll ask - and I would not be at all surprised to learn that he didn’t see my tweet in the first place.
Inspiration from other writers…
Just yesterday, writing my daily summary of a chapter from Age of Conversation 2, I browsed through to Ed Cottons Blog, as I’d chosen to write about his chapter - and came across a blog about the concept of originality, plagiarism, and theft, that cited a film-maker.
Rule #5: Nothing is original. Steal from anywhere that resonates with inspiration or fuels your imagination. Devour old films, new films, music, books, paintings, photographs, poems, dreams, random conversations, architecture, bridges, street signs, trees, clouds, bodies of water, light and shadows.
Select only things to steal from that speak directly to your soul. If you do this, your work (and theft) will be authentic. Authenticity is invaluable; originality is nonexistent. And don’t bother concealing your thievery—celebrate it if you feel like it.
In any case, always remember what Jean-Luc Godard said: “It’s not where you take things from—it’s where you take them to.”
— Jim Jarmusch
Quote from an interview with Moviemaker Magazine in 2004, brought to my attention by fellow AOC2 author Ed Cotton.
Now, I of course link to the original interview, and to Ed’s blog, simply because that’s the etiquette of blogging, and it keeps the lawyers happy when citing others’ work. But I also link because adding links and acknowledging sources makes my writing more authoritative, and makes it more interesting, as it may lead you, the reader, on to more interesting and surprising ideas and writing. Making those new connections might just inspire you.
Is this blog Art?
To me, it’s a centrally important aspect of blogs that they are inspired by other writers and new ideas, and the conversations and insight that arise when others join in a discussion inspired by a blog, a comment, or a tweet. (There can be a tendency towards an ‘echo-chamber’ at times, with many writers covering the same ground, but originals always stand out.)
In the same way that writers like Tolstoy, Mayakovsky, Hemingway and Burns inspire me, and film-makers like Spielberg, Huston, Eisenstein and Boyle do, other bloggers also inspires me. And all of these artists borrow, rework, restate, refer to, parody, allude to, nod to, acknowledge, steal from and are fuelled by the work of others - whose work cannot fail to have been similarly created via other, inspired, precedents.
So is what you see before you a work of art? And where do you think I stole it from? Let’s hear from you…
These related posts may interest you:
- 236 Reasons to buy ‘Age of Conversation 2′ from tomorrow. And because I say so.
I’m one of 237 authors who have contributed to the publication ‘Age of Conversation 2 - Why don’t they get it?‘ and I’m very happy to announce that you can buy the... - 237 Reasons to read AOC2: Day 59, Quote 29 - Corentin Monot
“Another reason why people are skeptical and even reluctant about conversational marketing is the fear of the new. Few people actually posses a genuine entrepreneurial mind, we all know that the successful... - I still don’t take meetings. I take tweetings.
[ This article was originally published at Digital Biographer on 5th September 2008, and was syndicated to The Next Web on 6th September, 2008 ] © Copyright 2008 Clarocada Ltd. It has been... - Social Media Management Fees, Authority Blogging and Calling yourself Names…
Two terms have come to my attention in the last 24 hours. One was “Social Media Management Fees“, the other “Authority Blogging“. Social Media Management Fees Yes. The term makes sense, now... - Blog08 Amsterdam: A-List Bloggers line-up expands, early bird discount ends tomorrow.
Blog08, Amsterdam, on the 24th October 2008, has added some great bloggers to its line-up, and tomorrow is your last chance to get an early bird discount to save €45 on the...
authority, authors, blonging, conversation 2.0, digital biographer, share, social media




Add New Comment
Viewing 1 Comment
Thanks. Your comment is awaiting approval by a moderator.
Do you already have an account? Log in and claim this comment.
Do you already have an account? Log in and claim this comment.
Add New Comment
Trackbacks
(Trackback URL)