
Forbidden Literature
Case Studies on Censorship
- 264 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Forbidden Literature
Case Studies on Censorship
About this book
Freedom of the printed word is a defining feature of the modern world. Yet censorship and the suppression of literature never cease, and remain topical issues even in the most liberal of democracies. Today, just as in the past, advances in media technology are followed by new regulatory mechanisms. Similarly, any attempt to control cultural expression inevitably spurs fresh discussions about freedom of speech. In Forbidden Literature scholars from a variety of disciplines address censorship's past and present, whether in liberal democracies or totalitarian regimes. Through in-depth case studies they trace a historical continuum in which literature reveals its two-sided nature: it demands both regulation and protection. The contributors investigate the logic of literary repression, particularly in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and analyze why it is thought essential to control literature. Moreover, the authors determine how literary practices are shaped and transformed by regulation and censorship.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- I Literature in court
- Only a bullet through the heartcan stop a lesbian vampire
- The case against Lady Chatterley’s Lover
- The sadist housewife
- So bad it should be banned
- II Contingencies of censorship
- Risen from the ashes
- Some aesthetic sideeffects of copyright
- ‘A Romanian Solzhenitsyn’
- III Censorship and politics
- Poison, literary vermin,and misguided youths
- Cultural policy as biopolitics
- Protecting books from readers
- Truth, knowledge, and power
- References
- About the authors