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William & Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice

Abstract

Queer transformative works promote social justice in marginalized queer communities by offering much-needed representation and visibility. These works fill an essential gap in a societal storytelling canon historically bereft of such material. Notwithstanding this societal benefit, these works pose complex legal and ethical challenges at the crossroads of copyright protections and creative expression. This Note examines the cultural significance and social benefits of queer transformative works in combination with an analysis of the legal landscape and ethical considerations that such works must navigate to maintain a harmonious existence with the original works that inspired them. A more nuanced understanding of the role these works play in queer self-actualization shows that even a transformation of the source material as small as interpreting two characters in a queer romantic pairing has far-reaching benefits on its readers that the original material could not quite touch on its own.

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