Credit Where Credit is Due: Pleasures and Perils of Quotation; 1989
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- Identifier
- MS1133-0105
- Title
- Credit Where Credit is Due: Pleasures and Perils of Quotation; 1989
- Description
- Dean John Turner began and ended his 1989 presentation discussing how Senator Joe Biden’s run for the presidency ended soon after he failed to give credit several times to a source he used in campaign speeches. Turner explains that credit must be given for some quotations, but does not need to be given for others. Many examples are given to demonstrate the challenge of deciding when credit must be given and when it does not.
- Date
- 2 March 1989
- Creator
- Turner, John M.
- topic
- talk
- lecture
- SPHEX Club
- John Mills Turner
- Turner
- 1989
- quotation marks
- plagiarism incident
- Joe Biden
- Neil Kinnock
- public speaking
- historical references
- cultural heritage
- Bartlett's Familiar Quotations
- public domain
- proverbs
- imaginative literature
- political leaders
- presidential rhetoric
- speechwriting
- proper credit
- attribution
- Type
- Text
- Genre
- lectures
- Digital Format
- application/pdf
- Language
- English
- Repository
- George M. Jones Library Association
- Rights
- https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
- Rights Holder
- John M. Turner
Part of Credit Where Credit is Due: Pleasures and Perils of Quotation; 1989