<p>see also<ahref="Diversifying_through_use.html"title="User:Simon/Diversifying through use">diversifying through use</a>, <ahref="Editing.html"title="User:Simon/Editing">editing</a>, <ahref="Multiplying_form.html"title="User:Simon/Multiplying form">multiplying form</a>
</p><p>The library is a collection of texts and the readers collected around them. Nothing comes from nothing, everything comes from somewhere, something or someone. Authors are dependent on other texts, writers, and readers. I write this text using borrowed words. As a legal, economic and institutional construct<supclass="reference"id="cite_ref-1"><ahref="#cite_note-1">[1]</a></sup>, authorship is problematic; current publishing models see texts as the intellectual property of authors possessed with “originality”. This originality is a myth; each text is layered in dependencies.
<liid="cite_note-1"><spanclass="mw-cite-backlink"><ahref="#cite_ref-1">↑</a></span><spanclass="reference-text">Weinmayr, E., ‘Confronting Authorship, Constructing Practices (How Copyright is Destroying Collective Practice)’ in Jefferies, J. and Kember, S. (eds.) (2019) <i>Whose Book is it Anyway?: A View from Elsewhere on Publishing, Copyright and Creativity</i>. Open Book Publishers. doi:10.11647/OBP.0159</span>