Plain thieving
PLAGIARISM
IS defined in dictionaries as the "wrongful appropriation,"
"close imitation," or "purloining and publication" of
another author’s "language,
thoughts, ideas, or expressions," and the representation of them as one's
own original work, but the notion
remains problematic with nebulous boundaries.
The
modern concept of plagiarism as immoral and originality as an ideal emerged in Europe only in the 18th
century, particularly with the Romantic Movement, while in the previous
centuries authors and artists were encouraged to "copy the masters as
closely as possible" and avoid "unnecessary invention."
The
18th century new morals have been institutionalized and enforced prominently in
the sectors of academia and journalism,
where plagiarism is now considered academic dishonesty and a breach of journalistic ethics, subject to sanctions like expulsion and
other severe career damage. Not so in the arts,
which not only have resisted in their long-established tradition of copying as
a fundamental practice of the creative
process, but with the boom of
the modernist and postmodern movements in the 20th century, this
practice has been heightened as the central and representative artistic device. Plagiarism remains tolerated by 21st
century artists.
Plagiarism
is not a crime per se but is disapproved more on the grounds
of moral offence, and cases of plagiarism can involve
liability for copyright infringement.
If
the above brief is bylined Bong Z. Lacson, then I am a damned plagiarist.
Attributing
it properly to Wikipedia makes me a researcher.
Plagiarism
is plain and simple stealing. The scale and scope of what is thieved make the
difference between pilferage and plunder. A sentence, a paragraph copied
verbatim and passed on as one’s own comprises the former, a whole body of work
– feature, essay, research paper, speech, critique, etc. – the latter. Still,
and all, a violation of the Commandment “Thou shalt not steal.” And “Thou shalt
not covet thy neighbor’s goods” too.
Mere
translation of another’s work in another language does not make it as the
translator’s own. Nothing lost in the translation, the original ideas, thoughts
therein remain reposited in the author.
So
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy could not have known a single word in Pilipino, still,
his were the great ideas Sen. Tito Sotto appropriated as his own.
Yes,
the plagiarist is in no way exculpated by his reformatting of the work, so long
as the original ideas are kept en toto. It is like Barbie or Ken – pardon the
banality of the analogy – no matter how a child dresses them her way, they
remain Mattel’s.
Even
more vulgar, as the Filipino witticism holds: Mag-amerikana man ang monkey, unggoy pa rin. Magpabango man si porky, baboy pa rin. Gone a bit off-tangent there
maybe.
Paralleling
the Sotto affair is the local media’s own current fixation on ethical questions
rising from the publication of press releases.
Asks Headline’s Cha
Cayabyab in Facebook: “What is unethical? Publishing a press release or writing
for a government agency and for a newspaper at the same time? Know your terms,
dear. Make sure you know me well before you make judgments.”
The direct addressee “dear” known only to her.
Still, I tabbed: No question of ethics in
publishing a press release, so long as you don't claim authorship of it if you
did not write it.
For then, it becomes plagiarism, plain and simple.
The Philippine Daily
Inquirer’s Tonette Orejas totally agreed, but then: “Problem
is young writers these days just delete the names of PIA writers and claim it
as theirs en toto. Bad!”
And the thread has gone on and on and on…
As it happens, it is not only young writers that claim
authorship of press releases, whether coming from the Philippine Information
Agency, the Public Relations Department of the Clark Development Corp., or from
the information offices of the Capitol, and the cities of San Fernando and
Angeles.
Outright plagiarism has become common practice here,
reflective of the indolence, if not of the incompetence of many in the local
media. Bad, really bad.
Many a time you see the same story bylined differently in
other papers but taglined “Press Release” with the corresponding source
in Punto!
Yes, it is our policy to attribute the press release whence
it cometh. If it is re-written and infused with additional facts and figures by
our writers, then we find it meriting of his/her byline or tagline.
Cha’s
other beef, writing for a government agency and for a newspaper at the same
time, is a totally different matter. Ethics dictates that such writer
identifies himself/herself as working with the government so the readers will
have foreknowledge of his/her biases.
Plagiarism
though is not always as easily delineated or defined as in the case of press
releases. Or as always wilful, on the part of the writer.
I
myself am in constant dread if I have inadvertently or unwittingly taken parts
of someone else’s work and incorporated it in my own without the proper
attribution.
It
is easy – and I do this diligently – to cite reference works and authors quoted
in my articles when I am directly noting them from the internet or from books
on hand.
Due
diligence however becomes fairly impossible when dredging one’s memory bank
while writing, especially nearing deadline. It’s like: Are these words, phrases
coming to mind originally mine? Or are they figments from long memorized
passages from hundreds of books and periodicals read, or maybe my personal
impressions of them?
Authors
may have been long forgotten but their ideas still remembered. Or remembered in
name but not in work.
There
is absolutely no wilful intention in me to take another’s work as my own. If
you notice anything in my writings suspiciously similar to another’s, then –
please – let me know ASAP.
I
will damn that other for plagiarising my work. If his came after mine.
I
will damn myself, don sackcloth and sit in ashes. If his came before mine.
There’s
no justification to plagiarism. Once you did it – and are found to have done it
– there’s no other recourse but to own up to it and apologize.
No
matter your being some senator of this republic.
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