Every year, a new collection of works including books, films, comics, and music enter the public domain. Creative work, depending on what type of media it is, typically expire from copyright 95 - 100 years after first publication. In January 2025, books from 1929 and sound recordings from 1924 are available to use and adapt.
What does this mean and why should you care?
Works in the public domain are not subject to copyright, which means you (yes, you!) are able to use and remix characters and stories to create new content. Are you a Popeye fan? Good news, Popeye is now in the public domain! You can already find some hilarious and questionable reimagenings of Popeye on YouTube (we'll leave it up to you to look them up).
Here are some works now in the public domain that we have in the Macdonald-Kelce Library and on the web:
The Cocoanuts - The first Marx Brothers Film
Singin in the Rain - A song made famous by the 1952 musical starring Gene Kelly, written in 1929 by Arthur Freed and Nacio Herb Brown. Here's the DVD to borrow of the 1952 film.
Adaptations are fun and can only be freely created and distributed using works in the public domain. Get creative UTampa.
Macdonald-Kelce Library - The University of Tampa - 401 W. Kennedy Blvd. - Tampa, FL 33606 - 813 257-3056 - library@ut.edu - Accessibility
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