The copyright information is generally on the reverse of the title page, and the bibliography is generally at the end of the text, before the index.
Yes, as the year and publisher.
Use the latest copyright date.
Tim Dunn has written: 'The Bob Dylan copyright files 1962-1995' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Catalogs, Copyright, Music 'The Bob Dylan copyright files 1962-2007' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Catalogs, Copyright, Music
Thorvald Solberg has written: 'Copyright bibliography' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Copyright 'Foreign Copyright Laws: A List of the Foreign Copyright Laws Now in Force ..' 'The present international copyright situation' -- subject(s): Bern copyright convention (1886), Copyright, International Copyright, Revisions, 1928, Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works 'Copyright in Congress, 1789-1904'
Information about similar books would be in the bibliography. "Biblio" is Greek for books, and "bibliography" means writing about books.
Claire Frigon has written: 'Copyright' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Copyright 'Library evaluation according to user requirements' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Evaluation, Libraries, Library use studies
George S. Grossman has written: 'Legal bibliography' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Environmental law 'Omnibus copyright revision legislative history' -- subject(s): Copyright, Patent laws and legislation, Trademarks 'Clinical legal education' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Law, Study and teaching
Properly citing references (in footnotes, endnotes, and/or a bibliography) includes the copyright information.
First you look for a copyright date on the work itself.Second a biography of the author will often give creation dates associated with a particular workThird, a bibliography/discography/filmography will generally be listed in chronological order.
To the extent that it is copyrightable, it will be protected automatically; there is no need to take any further action. Whether it is copyrightable or not depends on the type of content. For example, a list of dates and topics to be discussed may not be considered sufficiently creative, and a simple bibliography would not be copyrightable either. However, a detailed, annotated bibliography might be. Also, if you wrote the course as part of your responsibilities as an educator, for example, it could be considered a work-made-for-hire of your employer, in which case you would not be able to retain the copyright.
Walter Arthur Copinger has written: 'The Bible and its transmission' -- subject(s): Bible, Bibliography, History 'Index to Precedents in Conveyancing, and to Common and Commercial Forms, Arranged in ..' 'On the Custody and Production of Title Deeds: And Other Documentary Evidence at Law, in Equity ..' 'Copinger on the law of copyright in works of literature, art, architecture, photography, music and the drama' -- subject(s): Copyright, International Copyright 'Hand list of what is believed to be the largest collection in the world of editions of \\' 'County of Suffolk' -- subject(s): History 'Tables of stamp duties from 1815 to the present time' 'Supplement to Hain's Repertorium bibliographicum, Or, Collections toward a new edition of that work' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Incunabula 'Supplement to Hain's Repertorium bibliographicum' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Incunabula