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Clarifying Cultural Property

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 November 2010

Kristen A. Carpenter
Affiliation:
University of Colorado Law School. Email: kristen.carpenter@colorado.edu
Sonia K. Katyal
Affiliation:
University of Colorado Law School. Email: kristen.carpenter@colorado.edu
Angela R. Riley
Affiliation:
University of Colorado Law School. Email: kristen.carpenter@colorado.edu

Extract

Author Stephenie Meyer forever altered the cultural existence of Quileute Indians when she wrote them into her Twilight novels. Now a veritable global phenomenon complete with books, movies, and affiliated merchandise, the Twilight series depicts young, male members of the tribe as vampire-fighting werewolves who ferociously defend a peace and territorial treaty made with local bloodsuckers. In reality, the Quileute Tribe consists of approximately 700 Indians, many of whom live on a remote reservation in the pacific Northwest, a tiny parcel of the once vast Quileute territory. Since Twilight's unprecedented international success, the Quileute have been overwhelmed with fans and entrepreneurs, all grasping, quite literally in some cases, for their own piece of the Quileute.

Type
“IN DEFENSE OF PROPERTY”: AN EXCHANGE
Copyright
Copyright © International Cultural Property Society 2010

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