So... may I do stuff with your mom's poems?
December 12, 2007 4:43 AM
I'm writing a letter to the adult children of a poet who died in the 90s, asking them for permission to use their mother's writing as part of a creative project I'm doing (experimental audio/video).
Her children run her estate and I was referred to them after asking her publisher for text permission.
I know this is ultra-hypothetical, but can you imagine what you'd be interested in hearing if you were those children?
(Forget the practical considerations like licensing and money; those will be negotiated between me and the publisher later, if the children give permission. Obviously the mother would be credited in all versions of the work, and her texts would be used in full and not altered.)
The only instruction the children's representative gave me was to enclose examples of previous work I've done that included other people's poems.
I have a lot to say about their mother and the effect of her work on me (I could write many pages about that), so I have to decide how much of that her kids will want to hear. I'm asking about using three poems, and one of the poems is about the experience of being pregnant with one of the children I'm writing to. I don't know exactly how or whether to address that directly.
I really, really care about being able to use these poems, so I want to make this letter as appealing as possible. I can only find one other example of this poet's work being used as part of another creative work, and that was done within her lifetime, so that suggests maybe her children have never given such permission before (or have never been asked, which I guess is possible; she's not hugely famous). This is my first experience asking text permission from living people rather than just negotiating with a publisher.
Her children run her estate and I was referred to them after asking her publisher for text permission.
I know this is ultra-hypothetical, but can you imagine what you'd be interested in hearing if you were those children?
(Forget the practical considerations like licensing and money; those will be negotiated between me and the publisher later, if the children give permission. Obviously the mother would be credited in all versions of the work, and her texts would be used in full and not altered.)
The only instruction the children's representative gave me was to enclose examples of previous work I've done that included other people's poems.
I have a lot to say about their mother and the effect of her work on me (I could write many pages about that), so I have to decide how much of that her kids will want to hear. I'm asking about using three poems, and one of the poems is about the experience of being pregnant with one of the children I'm writing to. I don't know exactly how or whether to address that directly.
I really, really care about being able to use these poems, so I want to make this letter as appealing as possible. I can only find one other example of this poet's work being used as part of another creative work, and that was done within her lifetime, so that suggests maybe her children have never given such permission before (or have never been asked, which I guess is possible; she's not hugely famous). This is my first experience asking text permission from living people rather than just negotiating with a publisher.
Great point. By "experimental" I just meant "abstract." Definitely nothing but positive associations because the texts themselves are positive and beautiful, and the work will grow straight out of the texts. It's a great idea for me to make that clear in the letter (and my past-work samples will help make that clear too).
posted by allterrainbrain at 5:19 AM on December 12, 2007
posted by allterrainbrain at 5:19 AM on December 12, 2007
My mom is a poet and it's likely I'll be her literary executor after her death.
If it were me, I know I would be turned off by pages of gushing about my mom's work. It might feel like overkill, or ass-kissing, in an odd way. So I heartily second what headspace said about keeping your letter to brief sincere appreciation, the basics of your project, your means of expression, and of course your ultimate message.
And if you're received warmly, I would also suggest that you ask her kids if they have text suggestions. I know my mom's body of work inside and out, and your poet's kids might be the same way. There might even be unpublished work that fits your theme.
(And please post back in projects or email me when your project is moving forward. I'm a poetry geek, and would love to hear about it.)
posted by minervous at 6:18 AM on December 12, 2007
If it were me, I know I would be turned off by pages of gushing about my mom's work. It might feel like overkill, or ass-kissing, in an odd way. So I heartily second what headspace said about keeping your letter to brief sincere appreciation, the basics of your project, your means of expression, and of course your ultimate message.
And if you're received warmly, I would also suggest that you ask her kids if they have text suggestions. I know my mom's body of work inside and out, and your poet's kids might be the same way. There might even be unpublished work that fits your theme.
(And please post back in projects or email me when your project is moving forward. I'm a poetry geek, and would love to hear about it.)
posted by minervous at 6:18 AM on December 12, 2007
Thanks very much for three interesting answers!
posted by allterrainbrain at 11:22 PM on December 13, 2007
posted by allterrainbrain at 11:22 PM on December 13, 2007
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While it's important for you to express your admiration and your respect for the work, I think the primary concern (if they lend permission at all) is what kind of association you will be making between your art and their mother's art.
posted by headspace at 5:09 AM on December 12, 2007