How can I publish a translation of a book?
I'm in the process of translating a book (scientific publication) for private use. If I ever decide to publish it: what is the procedure? Who is the right person to ask for publishing rights and translation approval?
Two of three authors are deceased, and I still need to find out what is the situation with the third one. I'm translating from a Russian translation of the book (due to the unavailability of the original).
If all three authors show up to be deceased - should I contact the original publisher(s) (since it was a joint publication by two companies) or the publisher of the version I'm translating (since one (the Poles) are holding the general, and the other (the Russians) are holding the Russian translation rights)?
Furthermore, the Russian publisher went out of business (Mir Moscow).
This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/q/6118. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
1 answer
You'll need to contact the original author and/or their publisher. Either one will direct you to the correct person to deal with - there's no blanket rule over who has which rights, so you'll need to check who's got translation rights in your specific case, and whether that person is willing to let you translate the material "officially."
Your case is even harder, since it sounds like you're running out of related people you can contact. The piece may well be an orphan work, and as far as I can see, there is no legal way to use such a work. So the bottom line is: you'll need to search out whatever connection you possibly can. Approach every angle that presents itself. Once you make contact with somebody, you'll (hopefully) have an easier time finding the person you're ultimately looking for.
If you do make contact, be sure to be clear on what type of publication you're aiming for - publishing freely on the web is very different than print publishing for profit; you might be able to get permission for one but not the other.
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