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Spock
07-06-2006, 12:35 PM
LONDON - From Associated Press
July 06, 2006 8:15 AM EDT
Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling received an honorary doctorate on Thursday in recognition of the help she has given researchers into multiple sclerosis.

Rowling, whose mother died of the wasting disease of the nervous system, was awarded a Doctorate of Laws by Aberdeen University in Scotland.

The writer of best-selling tales about a young wizard is president of the Multiple Sclerosis Society Scotland and has donated substantial sums to Aberdeen University's Institute of Medical Sciences for its research into the illness.

"J.K. Rowling is best known because of a book that she wrote in a cafe in Edinburgh which has made her a household name," Neva Haites, head of the university's College of Life Sciences and Medicine, told the award ceremony at Aberdeen's Marischal College.

"However, what is less well known is Ms. Rowling's significant contribution to many charitable causes."

Haites said Rowling had taken on leadership of the MS Society Scotland after discovering "what she called 'the appallingly poor quality of care available to people with multiple sclerosis in Scotland'."

"She is an example of a Scottish leader who has used her reputation and wealth to support the battle for improving human health and for fighting human disease," Haites said.

Dressed in a dark suit, Rowling smiled to acknowledge the audience's applause as the received the honor.

"I am thrilled ... It is very exciting," she told reporters afterward.

Rowling already has honorary degrees for her services to literature from the Scottish universities of St. Andrews, Edinburgh and Napier.

Her mother, Anne, died of multiple sclerosis as the age of 45 in 1990.

jammi567
07-06-2006, 04:18 PM
is this anything to do with harry potter, or is it just JK?

Spock
07-06-2006, 05:30 PM
....sigh.....:( if you READ the thread title, it has to do with news about JKR, who wrote HP and so belongs in this section.

jammi567
07-06-2006, 05:35 PM
*sacastic*ohhhhhhhhhhh, sor-ry mister know it all guy. sorry for asking a simple question. :mad: :mad:

Spock
07-06-2006, 05:36 PM
http://www.jkrowling.com/

This site has lots of great information right from the authors pen. :cool:

Butterbeer
07-06-2006, 05:55 PM
..er... Jammi ... i was tempted to write that (wot spock said - just to be clear here) myself!

no offence, but it is pretty clear :D

but i'll give ya a top 9.7 for acceleration to anger .... almost as good as me on the rare occasion :rolleyes: :o ;)

best, BB

jammi567
07-06-2006, 05:56 PM
only checking. *goes off this thread in a moody sulk*

Butterbeer
07-06-2006, 05:57 PM
ahhh come back ... you'll enjoy it ! :)

Spock
07-06-2006, 06:02 PM
J.K. Rowling has revealed that in the 7th and final Harry Potter story, 2 characters are set to die.On the Richard and Judy show yesterday, she also revealed, that she had actually written the final chapter, of the final book back in 1990.

"One character had a reprieve, but i have to say that two die, that i didn't intend to die" she said.

But she is being carefull not to reveal, who those characters are.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/5119836.stm

Butterbeer
07-06-2006, 06:06 PM
interesting.


what's your guess as to which two?

jammi567
07-06-2006, 06:14 PM
*comes back reluctantly*. there is this theory that she is following an alchimal process, and you can view this article here (http://www.mugglenet.com/editorials/spinnersend/se07.shtml). for those who can't be bothered to read it, it's predicting that Hagrid will die next. the other person who i think'll die is, of course, voldemort.

Butterbeer
07-06-2006, 06:24 PM
not harry then?

Spock
07-06-2006, 06:26 PM
Most interesting as I was thinking Hagrid but couldn't give myself a reason why I felt that way, especially since his giant blood protects him from so many jinx and spells.

Volde is a given and JKR specifically said "two die that I didn't intend to die" which leaves him out completely.
I'm really in the dark on this

Butterbeer
07-06-2006, 06:28 PM
is it just me or would Hagrid dying have the most emotional response do you think?

jammi567
07-06-2006, 06:46 PM
Most interesting as I was thinking Hagrid but couldn't give myself a reason why I felt that way, especially since his giant blood protects him from so many jinx and spells.

Volde is a given and JKR specifically said "two die that I didn't intend to die" which leaves him out completely.
I'm really in the dark on this
maybe he dies by non-magical means. why does that quote mean that hagrid is left out? afterall, she could mean any two characters, for example, ron and hermione.

azalea
07-12-2006, 05:41 PM
IOW, if we accept that Hagrid was meant to die all along, and then two are dying whom she didn't intend to die, then one of them can't be Hagrid. But then if someone got a reprieve, then maybe she's changed her mind about Hagrid dying, but only IF we are right about his being marked for death in the first place! Basically, there will be at least 3 deaths in book 7. I don't know how many of those will be MAIN characters, though.

I do think Hagrid's death would have the potential for the most emotional response, for these reasons:
He was the first magical person Harry came to know at the start of his adventures (obviously he had met some as a baby, and then there were the random wizards he'd meet on the street, but he didn't KNOW them).
He has been an intimate protector of Harry, and represents a kind of physical protector the way Dumbledore represented a magical one.
He's a great, lovable character, and readers are very fond of him.

However, it could be that after Sirius' death, and then the MAJOR shock of Dumbledore's, that people will be braced for it, since they already know there will be deaths, and after Dumbledore, anyone is possible it seems.

Butterbeer
07-12-2006, 05:59 PM
i fear i must quit this thread ... i have not read yet the last book .... dumbledore dies????? :mad:


well, there goes the emotional response to that one! :rolleyes:

*edit*** ... ah well - don't worry about it! :)


just one o' them things i guess!

best, BB

cee2lee2
07-12-2006, 10:29 PM
......However, it could be that after Sirius' death, and then the MAJOR shock of Dumbledore's, that people will be braced for it, since they already know there will be deaths, and after Dumbledore, anyone is possible it seems.


I wouldn't even hazard a guess as to whose death may be coming, because I agree that anyone is possible. Sometimes her hints drive me mad and I wish she wouldn't say anything at all - just keep writing as fast as she can. Not being a writer, it's hard for me to understand how 2 can die that she didn't intend to die. I suppose it's for some kind of plot consistency, but she's in charge of the plot. Ah well, we'll know soon enough and then it will all be over. ;) However, if she kills off popular characters in the book, will we even be interested in seeing the movie of that book? Not sure I would want to see it.

cee2lee2
07-12-2006, 10:31 PM
i fear i must quit this thread ... i have not read yet the last book .... dumbledore dies????? :mad:


well, there goes the emotional response to that one! :rolleyes:

*edit*** ... ah well - don't worry about it! :)


just one o' them things i guess!

best, BB

Don't worry, even being forewarned, it's still going to have an emotional impact. Having read it twice, it wasn't much easier the second time.

azalea
07-13-2006, 10:23 AM
Sorry to have let out a spoiler -- I just assumed that since it came out a year ago everyone here had read it -- oops!

Spock
07-14-2006, 11:16 AM
No worries, a year is more than enough time to presume those here have read things.

jammi567
08-03-2006, 04:26 AM
in recent news, she was at a New York conference where, along with Stephen King, read pasages from their latest books. Jo also answered some big questions (from the bottom link below):

- Other than Harry, Jo would most want to bring Hagrid into the real world.
- There's more to Aunt Petunia than meets the eye, and we'll find out what's unique about her in book seven.
- Don't expect Dumbledore to pull a Gandalf.
- Dumbledore IS really dead. "Everyone needs to move through the 5 stages of grief" and get past his death. She also apologizes to DumbledoreIsNotDead.com for ruining the purpose of their site.
- Jo's future after Potter includes taking a long break from writing. She also plans to release a young children's book (currently half written) that is shorter than any Potter novel.
- The librarians in the Potter novels have to be evil, otherwise the students would have nice librarians to help them find all the information they need. "Hermione wouldn't have to do any work!"
- Author Salman Rushdie came up with his son to ask, after a detailed theory, if Snape is good or bad. Jo replied that "your opinion was correct." Rushdie's opinion, unfortunately, was hard to follow.
- After being asked if there was one question fans should have asked by now but haven't, Jo couldn't reference any question in particular.
- While taking a shower before the reading today, Jo said that she had come up with a different title for book seven that would work better than her current title. No word on which title will be used, though.
- Stephen King said he was scared of Death Eaters, to which Jo replied, "I scared Stephen King."
- Moderator Soledad O'Brien asked the three authors who from their books they'd invite to dinner. Stephen immediately said he'd invite Harry and Hermione.
- While Jo is listing the characters who she'd invite to dinner, she names the trio but then pauses. The crowd begins to shout out other characters, but Jo responds, "I'm the only one who knows who lives through the series," accidentally implying that she could only list characters who make it through the final book. Her final two choices (after realizing what she said) were Dumbledore and Hagrid.

Spock
08-03-2006, 11:15 AM
Fantastic article, Thanks BIG TIME for the news update, I never heard a word about this on the telly or on the web. :eek:

jammi567
08-03-2006, 11:37 AM
Only on Mugglenet will you be able to read the latest news to do with the books, movies and J.K.

jammi567
08-11-2006, 01:35 PM
Here's a transcript of the first (http://www.the-leaky-cauldron.org/#static:eventreports/jkrnycnight1), and second (http://www.the-leaky-cauldron.org/#static:eventreports/jkrnycnight2), nights of "An evening with Harry, Carrie and Gwarp".

jammi567
08-14-2006, 05:12 PM
JK Rowling has been dubbed by Forbes magazine the world's ninth highest earning celebrity. Apparently, she rakes in a cool $145 per minute, while making $77 per minute last year. Hannah Clark of the magazine, said: "With the $145 she earns every minute, Harry Potter author JK Rowling could buy more than a few boxes of Bertie Bott's Every Flavour Beans, one of the young wizard's favourite sweets."

We should probably take these figures with a grain of salt, especially since Jo brought up the topic on Richard & Judy this past June. "Initially people were reporting, and they still do frequently report much more than I got and I'm not pretending I'm not hugely wealthy because I am. But sometimes they print figures that certainly my accountant wouldn't recognize."
:eek: :D :cool:

cee2lee2
08-14-2006, 05:18 PM
JK Rowling has been dubbed by Forbes magazine the world's ninth highest earning celebrity. Apparently, she rakes in a cool $145 per minute, while making $77 per minute last year. Hannah Clark of the magazine, said: "With the $145 she earns every minute, Harry Potter author JK Rowling could buy more than a few boxes of Bertie Bott's Every Flavour Beans, one of the young wizard's favourite sweets."

We should probably take these figures with a grain of salt, especially since Jo brought up the topic on Richard & Judy this past June. "Initially people were reporting, and they still do frequently report much more than I got and I'm not pretending I'm not hugely wealthy because I am. But sometimes they print figures that certainly my accountant wouldn't recognize."
:eek: :D :cool:


However much it is, I hope she enjoys every penny.....she's given all of us tons of reading pleasure and there's more to come. :)

jammi567
08-14-2006, 05:23 PM
Totally true.

Butterbeer
08-14-2006, 05:24 PM
she sure as hell showed hollywood and the tolkien family how to negotiate rights!

hoooboy!

good on her!

jammi567
08-14-2006, 05:46 PM
How?

Butterbeer
08-14-2006, 05:54 PM
well, she negotiated incredibly lucrative rights for the movies and merchandising and played hardball scottish style to a degree that knocked the wesals at the studios for six!

the tolkien family sold the rights for the movies for peanuts, the divvies.

jammi567
08-14-2006, 06:06 PM
really.

inked
09-23-2008, 05:27 PM
http://www.mtv.com/movies/news/articles/1594367/story.jhtml



Sep 8 2008 4:30 PM EDT
'Harry Potter' Author J.K. Rowling Wins Copyright-Infringement Lawsuit
Judge blocks publication of proposed reference book, awards $6,750 in damages.

By Shawn Adler

Five months after author J.K. Rowling was nearly brought to tears while testifying in front of a New York courtroom, the woman behind "Harry Potter" had reason to smile Monday (September 8) with news that a judge had ruled in her favor in a copyright-infringement lawsuit against RDR Books, publishers of "The Harry Potter Lexicon."

In addition to blocking publication of the reference tome, Judge Robert P. Patterson awarded Rowling and co-plaintiff Warner Bros. Entertainment $6,750 in statutory damages, according to the Wall Street Journal.

"I took no pleasure at all in bringing legal action and am delighted that this issue has been resolved favourably," Rowling wrote in a statement. "I went to court to uphold the right of authors everywhere to protect their own original work. The court has upheld that right."

At issue in the case was the U.S. legal doctrine of fair use, a complicated, ambiguous law that seeks to protect copyright holders from unsanctioned use of their work. Rowling claimed in April, and again in a recent statement, that the proposed Potter reference guide stepped over the line from acceptable usage into "wholesale theft."

"The proposed book took an enormous amount of my work and added virtually no original commentary of its own. Now the court has ordered that it must not be published," she wrote. "Many books have been published which offer original insights into the world of Harry Potter. The 'Lexicon' just is not one of them."

Reference guides, of course, are published all the time. In order to avoid copyright infringement, it is necessary to divine the "purpose and character of the use." In simpler terms, the work must be "transformative" — so does it add to the culture's appreciation and/or knowledge of a work, or does it merely seek to supersede the original?

This was the point of contention most argued in the court case, with lawyers for Rowling insisting that the proposed book "takes too much and does too little." In other words, it adds little or no commentary or criticism.

Judge Patterson touched upon this distinction in his ruling.

"While the 'Lexicon,' in its current state, is not a fair use of the Harry Potter works, reference works that share the 'Lexicon' 's purpose of aiding readers of literature generally should be encouraged rather than stifled," he said, according to the WSJ. "[The] 'Lexicon' [however] appropriates too much of Rowling's creative work for its purposes as a reference guide."

Before becoming a book, "The Harry Potter Lexicon" was a Web site run by librarian Steve Vander Ark. The site was repeatedly praised by Rowling early this decade.
(end)
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>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

This is sad because of the former regard for which JKR held the LEXICON, awarded it special recognition, utilized it in writing (her own words!), and I think it is driven by the commodifiers of HP - the studios. They have been waging an entirely new extension of copyright understanding from internet to publications for years.

This ruling is going to have dire effects in the long-run twisting to be performed by lawyers. One potential ramification is the abortion of all fan sites and discussion with trademarked words in their domain names. The list is rather extensive, to put it mildly. Another ramification is that legitimate critical analysis will be stymied by the threat of lawsuits over titles and alleged infringement. This has happened already. See the introduction to THE IVORY TOWER and HARRY POTTER edited by Lana A. Whited (2002, University of Missouri Press).

The punitive damages are miniscule. The run will have to be destroyed. Fandom loses. And I am afraid that JKR does too. She now appears ridikkulously like a legal boggart or Umbridge clone. I hope this was at the insistence of her lawyers and was forced on her as an imperious curse action, but I have anxiety that it was not so.

I would have purchased the LEXICON encyclopedia for refernce work. When and if the JKR encyclopedia came out, I would have purchased it also. There was not, is not, and never would have been a substantial threat to JKR's work or the commodifier's-income stream by this work. This is very sad on many levels. The legal dam has just begun its work.

The examples of Tolkien and Lewis mitigate against this stand by JKR and her legal team.

GrayMouser
04-15-2010, 08:58 PM
JK Rowling's patriotism.

The Single Mother's Manifesto
But wait, some will say. Given that you have long since left single parenthood for marriage and a nuclear family; given that you are now so far from a life dependent on benefits that Private Eye habitually refers to you as Rowlinginnit, why do you care? Surely, nowadays, you are a natural Tory voter?

No, I’m afraid not. The 2010 election campaign, more than any other, has underscored the continuing gulf between Tory values and my own. It is not only that the renewed marginalisation of the single, the divorced and the widowed brings back very bad memories. There has also been the revelation, after ten years of prevarication on the subject, that Lord Ashcroft, deputy chairman of the Conservatives, is non-domiciled for tax purposes.


I chose to remain a domiciled taxpayer for a couple of reasons. The main one was that I wanted my children to grow up where I grew up, to have proper roots in a culture as old and magnificent as Britain’s.

....A second reason, however, was that I am indebted to the British welfare state; the very one that Mr Cameron would like to replace with charity handouts. When my life hit rock bottom, that safety net, threadbare though it had become under John Major’s Government, was there to break the fall. I cannot help feeling, therefore, that it would have been contemptible to scarper for the West Indies at the first sniff of a seven-figure royalty cheque. This, if you like, is my notion of patriotism.


http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article7096786.ece?token=null&offset=12&page=2

Nice to see when there's so much unabashed greed and I've-got-mine-and-to-Hell-with-everybody-else in the political culture these days.

inked
04-15-2010, 10:43 PM
Thanks, GM. Excellent piece and I read the whole thing!