Browse Issues Search Articles Submissions About the Journal Copyright Fixation Podcast Subscribe Go back to Issues A COPYRIGHT IGNORED: MARK TWAIN, MARY ANN CORD, AND THE MEANING OF AUTHORSHIP Citation: 69 J. COPYRIGHT SOC’Y, 421, (2022) Timothy J. McFarlin Samford University, Cumberland School of Law Introduction Did Mark Twain and the Atlantic infringe a copyright belonging to Mary Ann Cord in the story of how enslavers tore her family apart and how she was ultimately reunited with her youngest son? If so, might that long-ignored infringement be remedied today? In 1874, Cord told Twain the heartrending and astounding story of how her family had been ripped from her, and how she was liberated years later by her youngest, Henry, who had become a soldier for the Union. Twain proceeded to write Cord’s story down from memory, organizing the events chronologically, editing it, and describing how she told it. Twain published this manuscript in the Atlantic Monthly as “A True Story, Repeated Word for Word as I Heard It,” for money, under his name alone. Analyzing the questions above — Was this infringement? Could it still be remedied? — this project unfolds in two parts. This first part, “A Copyright Ignored,” focuses on the thorny threshold issue of copyright-ability, arguing that Cord was indeed an author who had a common-law copyright in the words she spoke to Twain. The second part, “A Copyright Restored,” published in the Wisconsin Law Review, tackles the issues of infringement and remedy, arguing that Twain and the Atlantic likely did violate Cord’s rights and, further, that a claim by her descendants may still exist today. In this way, her case may set a vital precedent for righting other longstanding wrongs, particularly those against the Black community. Cord’s case could set precedent in other ways, as well. The same key which unlocks her rights can help open us to a deeper understanding of authorship in copyright law. The answer to whether Cord — who it’s said could neither read nor write and who never claimed to be an author — qualifies as one should tell us about more than just copyright’s past. Contrary to the views of many courts and scholars, I argue here that “authorship is as it does.” It’s not merely a self-conscious enterprise. It need not be limited to people like Twain, Austen, and Hemingway. It’s for everyone, and the law should recognize that. Full Article cpy_69-3 Copyright IgnoredDownload Related Content Video Nov 4, 2025 Bartz and Beyond: Year Three of AI Copyright Litigation with Implications for Authors, Publishers, and Creators Now in the third year of copyright litigation over generative AI, the stakes for creators, platforms, and the publishing world… CLE Credit AI & Copyright Copyright Litigation in Focus Creativity & Technology Collide Video Nov 12, 2025 Getting Your Arms Around the Public Domain: What to Know As Another Year's Worth of Content Becomes Available November 12 @ 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm ET Getting ready to field public domain questions in the new year?… CLE Credit AI & Copyright Creativity & Technology Collide Journal September 28, 2025 LIBRARIES, EDUCATION, AND FAIR USE: A LECTURE 72 J. Copyright Soc'y 861Download AI & Copyright Creativity & Technology Collide