000 01263nam a22002177a 4500
020 _a9781108419697 (Hardback)
082 _a342.721
_bRIC
100 _aRichardson Megan
245 _aThe right to privacy: origins and influence of a nineteenth-century idea
260 _aNew York:
_bCambridge University Press
_c2017.
300 _axii,171p.
490 _aCambridge intellectual property and information law, 40
520 _aA sense of Victorian probity and piety was a signal feature of the case of Prince Albert v Strange, coming twelve years after Queen Victoria's ascension to the throne in 1837, and a year after a series of troubling revolutions in Europe (see Evans, 2016, Chapter 3), forming the subject of many anxious comments in Queen Victoria's Journals. The case showed a hitherto little-known domestic side to the royal couple's life, namely their engagement in the rational amusement of etching-making centred around their family, and featuring most notably their children and favourite dogs
650 _aAuthorship - History
650 _aCopyright - History
650 _aIntellectual property - History
650 _aPrivacy, Right of.
650 _aAuthorship, Secrecy, Privacy
650 _aCreative Self-fashioning
942 _cBK
999 _c344551
_d344551