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Morehouse to Benefit From Settlement Over Controversial Novel

Morehouse to Benefit From Settlement Over Controversial Novel

ATLANTA
The protectors of Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind have dropped their yearlong battle to stop publication of Alice Randall’s The Wind Done Gone, agreeing to an out-of-court settlement.
Under the terms of the settlement, Randall’s publisher, Boston-based Houghton Mifflin, agreed to make an unspecified contribution to Morehouse College, a historically Black school in Atlanta. In return, lawyers for Mitchell’s estate agreed to stop trying to block sales of Randall’s book, which tells the “GWTW” story from a slave’s point of view.
An Atlanta judge had blocked publication of The Wind Done Gone in April 2001, ruling that it violated the copyright of Mitchell’s 1936 classic about the Civil War. A month later, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta ruled that the injunction was an “extraordinary and drastic remedy” that “amounts to unlawful prior restraint in violation of the First Amendment.”
The book was published in June 2001 and was on best-seller lists for weeks.
Even though the book was already available, lawyers for the Mitchell estate had said they would continue the lawsuit in hopes of getting damages.
Lawyers for the Mitchell trust argued that Randall appropriated characters, scene, setting, plot and even some passages straight from Gone With the Wind. 
Houghton Mifflin and Randall argued that The Wind Done Gone was a parody protected by the First Amendment. They also maintained that, by imagining what Scarlett O’Hara’s slaves thought and felt, the book offered a new perspective on Mitchell’s story. The publishing industry closely watched the lawsuit, which could have affected how extensively parodies can borrow from copyrighted works. 



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