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Dear Friends - Some of you will remember Keith Aoki for his scholarly
contributions regarding copyright, but perhaps most memorably for his comic
book on the public domain. I knew Keith from the University of Oregon where
he regularly used slides of art and social criticism from the Visual
Resources Collection in his law classes. I just learned about his death
through the article from *The Chronicle of Higher Education* which I'm
posting below. Please share this with others who may remember his brilliant
and playful mind, his love for art, and his endless generosity.

Another tribute that describes more of his life and achievements is at
http://www.thepublicdomain.org/2011/04/27/rip-keith-aoki/

Chris.

May 15, 2011
Law Professor Created Comic Books in Crusade to Limit Copyright
[image: Law Professor's Legacy Includes Comic Books on Intricacies of
Copyright 1]

U. of California at Davis School of Law

Keith Aoki
Enlarge Image <http://chronicle.com/article/Law-Professors-Legacy/127547/#>

By Katherine Mangan

Like the swashbuckling heroes who populate his comic books, Keith Aoki was a
crusader for digital freedom. The law professor turned his artistic talents
into a powerful tool for battling overzealous copyright laws.

But those who knew Mr. Aoki, of the University of California at Davis School
of Law, say they will remember him best as a brilliant, funny, and humble
scholar.

Mr. Aoki, whose scholarship focused on intellectual property, civil rights,
critical race theory, and local-government law, died in his home in
Sacramento on April 26 after an extended illness. He was 55.

Although he published in traditional law journals, he was better known for
the entertaining, comic book-style publications about fair use and copyright
that he and two collaborators from Duke University created. Their audience
was documentary-film makers and other artistic creators who don't read law
journals.

Mr. Aoki, who had bachelor's and master's degrees in fine arts, drew
cartoons for an underground newspaper in New York City before tiring of the
starving artist's lifestyle and enrolling at Harvard Law School. A talented
musician who had played violin and guitar in a rock band, he worried that
stringent intellectual-property laws stifled creativity by making it hard
for artists to draw on their musical or artistic influences.

After receiving his law degree, in 1990, Mr. Aoki practiced law for two
years in Boston, specializing in technology law. He taught for more than a
decade at the University of Oregon before ending up at Davis, in 2006.
 Enlarge Image <http://chronicle.com/article/Law-Professors-Legacy/127547/#>[image:
Law Professor's Legacy Includes Comic Books on Intricacies of Copyright 2]

Mr. Aoki wrote and illustrated *Bound by Law? Tales From the Public
Domain* (Duke
University Press, 2006), with James Boyle and Jennifer Jenkins, a founder
and director, respectively, of Duke's Center for the Study of the Public
Domain. The heroine, a documentary-film maker named Akiko, battles copyright
issues as she tries to capture a day in the life of New York. Everywhere she
turns, she encounters copyrighted or trademarked material, whether music in
a nightclub or logos at a sporting event.

Mr. Boyle became acquainted with his co-author when he was a visiting
professor at Harvard Law and Mr. Aoki was a student. "I had heard about the
wonderfully iconoclastic cartoons he was doing about law school, which were
satirical and biting and just hilarious," he says.

Mr. Boyle wrote a moving
tribute<http://www.thepublicdomain.org/2011/04/27/rip-keith-aoki/> to
his friend and colleague on a blog called the Public Domain.

He had encouraged Mr. Aoki to become a professor "and watched with delight
as he opened his wings and soared—all the while insisting to all around him,
apparently seriously, that he knew he was really an impostor in the world of
academia, a fraud, an interloping artist who would be discovered any moment
and given the old heave-ho."

Mr. Aoki wrote briefs supporting the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a
nonprofit advocacy group for digital rights. Its legal director, Cindy Cohn,
described him to readers of the foundation's Web site as "one of the law
professors we came to count on in our many battles for your rights online."

His own artistic career began with a childhood fascination with cartoons. "I
fell in love with Marvel comics when I was 7 or 8 years old," he said in a
2006 interview with *The* *Register-Guard*, a newspaper in Eugene, Ore. "I
went to the drugstore and found *Spiderman* and *Fantastic Four*, and I was
hooked forever."

After Mr. Aoki's death, legal blogs were filled with reminiscences that
described his youthful exuberance and his willingness to challenge the
status quo.

A former colleague at Oregon, Kimberly D. Krawiek, described in one
entry<http://www.thefacultylounge.org/2011/04/no-instructions-no-rules-remembering-keith-aoki.html>
how,
at a faculty party, some children protested when an adult told them to
follow the instruction book so they wouldn't get hurt on the trampoline.
"All of a sudden Keith showed up, in his black leather jacket and long hair,
and started chanting, 'No instructions! No rules!' And then we all started
chanting along with him and jumping around on the trampoline shouting it.
That's how I'll always remember Keith-a fist in the air, shouting, 'No
instructions! No rules!' at the world."

Shortly before his death, Mr. Aoki had been working on illustrations for a
forthcoming publication about legal copyright, called *Pictures Within
Pictures*. The final three panels show him wearing a jet pack, ready to
blast off into space. "Well, I've got law review articles to write, classes
to teach, and exams to grade," it reads. "It may be a cliché, but my
friends, how this story ends is up to you!! So ... choose wisely ... and
adios amigos!!"

Mr. Aoki left behind a wife and two 9-year-old daughters.
Christine L. Sundt, Editor
*Visual Resources: An International Journal of Documentation *
PO Box 5316
Eugene OR 97405-0316 - USA
phone: 541.485.1420
VR Web site: http://www.mindspring.com/~sundt-vr/
csundt(at)mindspring(dot)com or
csundt(at)gmail(dot)com
_______________________________


*VR* 27:1 (March 2011)
View the table of contents:
http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g933682721<http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title%7Edb=all%7Econtent=g922223282>


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