Showing posts with label censorship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label censorship. Show all posts

Sunday 13 August 2023

Literature-Lib: Looking back at the days of liberated fiction

"Lionized" by the literary establishment during his/her own time, many a once-popular author is now denounced for racism, sexism, transphobia, and general deficiency in "DEI" credentials.

One such is Mordecai Richler, whose novel Barney's Version, lavishly praised upon publication, received Canada's Giller Prize 1997. It was "charged with comic energy and a wicked disregard for any pieties ..." says the blurb on the cover.

Disregard for pieties is still called wicked, but no longer in a complimentary way. "Wrongthought" is no joke; it's even being criminalized.

The hero of the novel (Barney), when falsely accused of variegated personal and professional immoralities, in his own defence responds with his own "version" of events -- and his entertainingly provocative views on culture and politics. 

If he thought the latter were bad back in the 1990s, he'd be horrified at the atmosphere today. Satirical humour was his weapon against political correctness, but his weaponry did nothing to stop the ignorant armies clashing even more on our darkling plain of wokeness. (Matthew Arnold too, writing at the dawn of liberal humanist tradition, would be horrified to see the 21st century's plain, swept with even more "confused alarms of struggle and flight".)

As for the Giller Prize (a prize Richler would never be nominated for now), and the ideology of present juries: how could change happen so quickly in the literary world? Such shrinkage of imagination and narrow-minded condemnation of free thought? How could the imposition of obligatory self-censorship have gone so far so fast? Yesterday's lionized are today's verminized.

A literary critic writing in 2022 objected to Richler opposing the "special pleading" of politically correct groups, and his disagreeing that Western society is unjust toward minorities. Indeed, if he was writing today he'd probably be sued by allies of identity groups who felt triggered, harmed and epistemically violated by his words, although writing today he'd probably never find a publisher at all. Publishers are businesses, and they want to stay in business in a field where personal free expression is now unpopular.

In fact, according to the University of Southern California, we're not even allowed to refer to a "field" in case it brings to mind the fields wherein slaves once worked. Compassionate people may want to save others from hurt, but history will still be history, even if we legislate public ignorance of it.

There were no Anglo-Saxon names among authors on the 2022 Giller prize shortlist, and only one the previous year. Of course, Canada gets more international immigrants every year, but Mordecai Richler might suspect a bit of "special pleading" going on here behind the Giller scenes. Since 1997, when he won the prize, there has been less satirical humour on offer. We live in an era of intellectual straightness, of hearing only self -- an arid environment of cultural grazers who survive on poor soil and poor nutrition, and need much herding.

In an interview on Writers & Company, Eleanor Wachtel noted that Richler had been called "irreverent and smart-ass", and warned that listeners might find the excerpt he was about to read "raunchy". That word seems quaint; today, we'd warn of "toxic masculinity" that might trigger "trauma-spectrum diorder".

Richler himself said he aimed to satirize the absurd while witnessing his own times. If he thought his 20th century times absurd, one can only guess what he'd think about "the times" today. More than a little "out of joint".


Reviews of Barney's Version in 1997 used the words "wonderful, hilarious, gripping, touching and humane". Today they'd more likely accuse him of being "racist, trans-phobic, sexist, stigmatizing and trauma-inducing", and if Richler gave a reading, the de-platformers would be shouting outside and waving placards. 








Friday 17 March 2023

Exclude the Exclusion Ambassadors ... please!

Some publishers employ "sensitivity readers" (editors) to police language in manuscripts which might make readers "feel unsafe". 

Sensitivity editors' role is actually to make publishers feel safe from attack by woke would-be censors. For that purpose, publishers now hire "Inclusion Ambassadors".

Bret Easton Ellis's latest novel came in for editorial correction* when his publisher's sensitivity readers complained it “was not a ‘positive’ portrayal of homosexuality”. 

Clearly, many classic books are in need of re-writing so that people can feel safe reading them. Readers don't want to be ambushed by the notion that there are more ideas in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in their philosophy.

Some books that seriously need to explain their attitude:

Black Beauty, for not supplying a positive portrayal of horse-abusers

War and Peace, for a non-positive portrayal of a Napoleonic war

Far From the Madding Crowd, for being negative about crowds

Animal Farm, for implied criticism of farmers

Wuthering Heights, for insensitivity toward people with fear of heights

Treasure Island, for casting aspersions on pirates

The Mill on the Floss, for stigmatizing people who can't afford dental care

Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, for not portraying "them" as a young woman or trans person 

Where's our freedom of expression, once it's edited away by publishers? Like Eeyore of Pooh Corner said of a lost thing:  "Somebody must have taken it. How like them."   

                   ================================

PS: A disclosure -- I've never read Bret Easton Ellis's novels* but I might now, for who can resist an author who says "I do not want to write anything with a fucking cell phone in it"?                                                                                         I'm sure tired of reading stories full of them, with characters who do nothing but talk on them, text with them, scroll through them, take pictures and solve murders with them ... So please, edit phones out, thought-pruners. ...



Tuesday 28 February 2023

Censorship -- first Roald Dahl, now Dilbert (Scott Adams)

Last week the victim was a kids-lit author, this week a cartoonist:  https://vancouversun.com/news/world/media-drop-dilbert-comic-after-creators-black-hate-group-remark/wcm/cfc72a46-200d-4ee2-aa28-81211ff6059d

Media de-platforming is itself a version of hate -- hate by censorship.

Some ethnic groups are allowed to denounce "hate", others are not. (Blacks accusing whites of hate nevertheless eagerly hate them back.) It's part of the "privileged" vs "marginalized" rhetoric that plays out in social discourse.  

Censorship is a lost cause anyway: governments and corporations can ban speech but they can't ban emotion. They can only replace hate speech with hate silence. People feel what they feel. 



Monday 6 February 2023

Trigger Warning

          This story may not be suitable for all readers. Mature subject matter:             reader discretion is advised.   

Caution: diverse viewpoints within

Strong language (politically non-correct): may offend some readers 

Novel concepts may be encountered

Characters may appear in this story who identify differently than you

You may not "see yourself" here

You may see others here

Characters in this story may include anti-hero as well as hero, an antagonist as well as protagonist

In this story, bad things might happen

This story might contain jokes

Read at your own risk: some readers have experienced broadening of mind 

Persons allergic to ideas are advised to shut this book immediately

            Call 111 if an Emergency Philosopher is needed




                    




Tuesday 31 January 2023

Granny's Business Model -- She'll say what you're afraid to say, for a dollar a word


                                                                                           -- Just Jests                        
           
                                   Media Visit to Granny's Free Speech Kiosk

Interviewer:  So Granny, this is a nice little business enterprise you've made for yourself.

Granny:  Yes, censorship opens up a surprising number of commercial opportunities.

Interviewer:  So, in taking this opportunity would you call yourself a free-speech heroine, or a trouble-maker?

Granny:  I don't aim to be either, although heroism often does cause trouble -- for someone.

Interviewer:  Will it make trouble for you if someone decides your speech is too incorrect? Aren't you afraid of being shot?

Granny:  Yes -- so this is bullet-proof glass I'm sitting behind.

Interviewer:  Ah. Opinions can be dangerous. Maybe you should add a Danger-Pay Surcharge to your fee. 

Granny:  Really, speech should be free. If someone is wise and broke, I'll express their forbidden thoughts gratis. (But don't tell the rich folks ...) Everything is monetized now. Your own magazine charges buyers or advertisers to read your words.

Interviewer:  True. I see you have quite an audience around your booth. Do some get upset if they don't approve when you contradict fashionably-correct attitudes?

Granny:  I do get an audience, but no one has to stay and listen if something offends them. The other side of free speech is the freedom to not listen.

Interviewer:  You're performing a public service, eh? 

Granny:  Indeed. I'm retired, I've got my little pension, I can afford to do this because I don't have to please an employer who could fire me for expressing what their pollsters have determined are not the popular public attitudes of the moment.

Interviewer:  Well good luck, Granny! Stay safe.

Granny:  I'll be fine. The up-side of being an old granny is that by being dismissed by influencers and virtue-signallers, we oldsters are also often overlooked by cancel-culture.

*  *  * 

"Democracy is not about how many people vote but about how many people feel free to say what they think in public".

                                              -- V. Ramaswamy, 2022

"... in the sunset of life ... I feel it my special mission to tell people what they are not prepared to hear." 

                                          -- Elizabeth Cady Stanton,1898





                                                      

Thursday 10 November 2022

On a Scroll

Walking, sitting at a bus stop, in a cafe or waiting room, lining up in a shop, walking the dog, visiting a playground with the kids -- whatever else they're doing, everyone seems to be scrolling through a smartphone at the same time. When do you ever see anyone reading a book, watching a sunset, or just sitting? Just thinking? Thoughts are buried under the spillage which content-providers lay out online. Advertisers and meme-merchants are on a roll.

The device-addicted are like pollinators primed by evolution to flit from bloom to bloom until they die. No thought is required because their brains are pre-wired. 

Once they learned that people's brains were pre-wired to crave gratification, and once digital innovation provided the perfect tool for harnessing cravings, advertisers and influencers found it easy to herd us. 

We are told the Internet offers free choice, but the algorithmic influencers and persuaders have pre-arranged the choices ("-range" coming from the French "ranger", to rank). This parody of freedom reminds us of Marx's theory that the State would wither away once the working class awoke. Instead, a pan-national state has come into being with an iron grip on our brains: the Cyber-state (and the world's workers never awoke, they just got "woke".)

Can we break out of cyber-bondage? Re-discover scattered bits of personal thought "recollected in tranquillity", phone turned off? We could replace social media with private media by turning our gaze to the physical world, to weather, birds, nature, passers-by, and our own ideas. Non-democratic governments now outnumber democratic ones on the obsessively phone-checking world stage; maybe because democracy depends on free-thinking citizens?

As we re-claim individual thought our addicted fingers might itch to start pecking again. We'll have to sit on our hands and free up our eyes. Yours might be rolling at this suggestion, but then again they might enjoy time off the scroll. They might even read a book in print. It's interesting how before the advent of the printed (or handwritten) book there was the ancient scroll -- of papyrus, say -- and after the printed book there was the online scroll. In between, we lived in a special literary moment.

Now, as in some of those earlier times, we live in a period of ideological thought control. Call something "hate" and it's banned. In former times people scratched messages in crypts, or like spies wrote coded secrets on scrolls slipped into holes in a rock wall: the romance of censor-dodging. Today, it's almost more fun to write for a world that tries to stop you than for one that scans-and-forgets you, un-noticing. 

What's ahead? More constriction, thought police and censorship as far as we can tell. So, more scrolls in the holes in walls, but also more challenges to the censors for readers are drawn to the forbidden, which becomes the secret, which becomes the mysterious. Often the best thing that happens to a book is to be banned. Sometimes it becomes a best-seller -- underground, newly "rare". Such irony: controversy sells, controversy does its own marketing ("contra"/against "verse"/speech). Speaking against is speaking for -- and often means being on a scroll. 





Friday 25 March 2022

When 'Chief Archivist' means 'Chief Censor'

Happened again! -- life out-satiricizing satire. This time, because Canadian History disobeyed the Top Ten Ideologies (BAD History!), Canada's government archivist cancels 7000 pages from the national records. 

All dictatorships purge records. In this case, it's to be anything not written from "indigenous perspective". 

Although "Archive" is defined as the "place where public records are kept", it's apparently legal for the archivists to hide history from the public. That is theft, and failure to protect publicly-owned records.

You can ban historic records but you can't change history, whether it has "content that offends some people" or not.

More at:

https://tnc.news/2022/03/07/trudeau-appointed-librarian-ordered-purge-of-online-historical-archives/


Sunday 13 February 2022

Playing With Censorship

 

Playing With Censorship

S. B. Julian

Cast: Board members of a community theatre:

President, Artistic Director, Publicist, Producer, plus an Assistant who comes and goes.

President:    As President of the Readers Theatre Board I'd like to welcome everyone to this meeting to select our Play Series. We'll choose three that will appeal to tourists and locals alike. Let's start with our new Artistic Director. (turns to her) What do you suggest?

Artistic Director:  (excitedly) I've prepared a list of 20 plays, but my absolute favourite would be Grease. With music, of course.

Pres.  Comments?  (Looks at the others. They pause to think.)

Publicist:     (has a camera around her neck.) I can tell you right now as your publicist, that Grease won't do. It would harm our donations, because it's been banned in the past for "drinking, smoking and a couple kissing onstage”. We'd have the CRD Health Officer shutting us down for breaking the smoking bylaw – even if not actually smoking. 

Producer:    How about something more artsy then, something like Picasso at the Lapin Agile?

Publicist:     (gasps) Even more kissing! And drinking. It has (quotes, reading stagily from a note) “people drinking in bars, and treating women as sex objects”.

A.D.: (dryly) Then how about The Vagina Monologues, where women objectify their own body parts?

Pres.: No. That's a non-starter, it's now accused of “offending transgender audience members”.

A.D.: Lysistrata, then? That's feminist enough for every new-fangled trans version of female you could dream up, isn't it?

Prod: No, that won't fly either, it's been considered "bawdy and indecent”. How about something more comic, like Calendar Girls?

Pub:  That's been cancelled elsewhere because of its “implication of nudity.”

A.D.  “Implication of”? Is that the same as actual nudity? Would our readers be nude?

Pub:  It could be the same. (S/he raises the camera which hangs around her neck) The posters used in Avenue Q were taken down due to “visible puppet cleavage”. You never know when nudity's going to scare the horses.

A.D.: But nude puppets ...?  Honestly, I give up!

Prod: You can't. You're the Artistic Director.

Pres:  Let's select an old-fashioned musical then. How offensive can that be? How about The King and I?

Prod: Huh! You're way out of date. It includes a “racist portrayal of Thai people”.

Pres:  Oh. Thoroughly Modern Millie?

Prod: Nope. Thoroughly un-modern – it’s a “racist portrayal of Chinese people”.

Pres:  Peter Pan?

Prod: Offensive to native Americans.

Pres:  West Side Story?

Prod: Stereotyping of Puerto Ricans.

Pres:  Ragtime?

Prod: Uses the N-word.  (The group falls silent)

Pres: Well what CAN we put on then?

A.D.  How about a classic like Angels In America?

Pub:  (shuddering) God no, we'd totally lose our funding, it's been condemned for “homosexual vulgarity”.

A.D.: Well can't gay people fund a revival then?

Pub.: (shrugs) They could, but would they want to? It's old-hat now.

A.D.  How about something “god-yes” then? Maybe Jesus Christ Superstar? Life of Brian? Mohammed Gets A Boner? 

Pres:  Don't even SAY that!

A.D.: What? Jesus Christ?

Prod: Let's be serious. Let's look at the old stand-bys. How about Blithe Spirit?

Pub:  Sorry to tell you, but it's been banned for “encouraging exploration of witchcraft and the occult”.

Pres.: I guess there's always Shakespeare.

Publ: As long as it's not Othello, given recent social-media BLM sensitivities ...

Prod.: Yeah. So forget Aladdin too ...

Publ: And certainly not The Merchant of Venice.

Pres.: Twelfth Night?

Pub.: Nope. Someone accused it of “alternative lifestyle instruction". Because of the cross-dressing, you know.

A.D.: I thought theatre was alternative lifestyle instruction ...               

(A knock on the door. Assistant enters -- man in a wide flowery hat,)                                         

Ass't.:  Can I bring anyone a coffee? I'll "set the stoups upon the table" shall I? Don't worry, the cups won't be poisoned. I may be two-spirited, but not two-faced.

Pres.:  Uh, fine . . . thanks. A coffee would be nice. I'll have a latte please.

Prod: Make mine black.

Assistant: Okay -- one milk and one African-American. Coming up. (He leaves)

Prod.: Now, where were we? (pause) Maybe it's best to stick to political plays then.

Pres:  As long as they're not anti-Israel.

Publ.: Or pro-Israel.

Prod. Anti-U.S. is always fair game.

Pres.: Or anti-Nazi. How about Cabaret? There's a well-loved old stand-by.

Pub.: Except it's been censored in the past for “onstage indecency, immodesty, immorality, and homosexual behaviour”.

Pres.: But that's why it's well-loved!

Pub.: Not now, in these ideological times. Life's no longer a cabaret, Old Chum

A.D.: (shakes her head sadly) Although we're still well-advised to “put down the book”, since words are as dangerous as dynamite. (The others look puzzled. She starts singing) “... put down the knitting, the book and the broom, come to the cabaret ...”  (pauses)  Oh never mind ...

Knock on the door. Assistant re-enters.

Assistant: I've got the newspaper on the phone, they still haven't got your play titles for the Summer Season. They want to know what they'll be. Oh -- and they also add that you lot couldn't even run a dog-and-pony-show.

Pub:  Tell them the titles are classified. Top secret censored ... hahaha ... (Assistant exits)

Pres.: So what are we going to do? What CAN we put on? 

Prod: (gloomily)  How about a dog-and-pony-show?

A.D.: (also gloomily)  How about commissioning something brand new? It could take place in a Trappist Monastery with a rule of silence. No one will say a word. No dialogue, no sex, no skin, no smoking, politics, stereotyping or witchcraft. 

Pres.: Good idea! The cast will consist of three monkeys. For two hours the audience will watch this:

(President puts his hands over his eyes, Producer puts hands over his ears, then Artistic Director puts hands over her mouth. PAUSE.  The publicist jumps up and aims her camera at them.)

Publicist:  Perfect! Hold that pose right there! (She takes a photo)    

  


                   

Sunday 16 January 2022

I want a word with you, CBC Radio & TV

 Never mind, it's all a "First world problem" anyway -- but there's something lame indeed (sorry, but it's the best word for it) about a national broadcaster (like CBC the narrowing-caster) lecturing the public about what vocabulary they're permitted to use. Or hear. Making an actual list of terms to be censored?!?

How can there be something wrong with a phrase like "spirit animal", it being a concept embedded in almost every culture in history? No one owns concepts. Logically, it would seem aboriginal groups that object to Latin & Greek as artifacts of "Euro-centrist colonialism", shouldn't be using the words "spirit" and "animal" anyway, their roots being Latin: "spiritus" (breath) and "animus" ( moving living thing).

And "tribes" (which were simply groups settled along a river, itself a tributary of a greater river and conTRIBUTING to its flow) means everybody. Their languages flow one into another. To pick up expressions one from another is a way of giving a tribute. And (although CBC social justice warriors won't like this tool) these words are also related to 'tribunal' -- a hearing to confront governments (e.g. Roman senate) in defense of preserving citizens' liberties. CBC seems not to like liberties, like free speech, for example.

Anyone who speaks English or Romance languages speaks Latin; it's embedded in the flow, the confluence, the fluency of these language-streams. More examples among the favourite Latin woke-hates are actually their most-used: 're-conciliation', 'ap-propriate', 'geno-cide' (cidere - to kill, genus - group), 'misogyny' (from 'gynus' - Greek for woman), not to mention the Top Trio: 'diversity', 'equity', and 'inclusion' (vers, aequus, and cludere - to close).

Maybe Canada needs An Act To Defend Threatened Vocabulary, meaning words that stand for concepts we're losing, words like 'skepticism', 'satire', 'irony', 'jocosity', 'ribaldry'. Maybe there should be a contest like CBC's "Canada Reads". Call it "Canada Speaks". A panel would vote on the Worst Words of the Year -- all hysterically disagreeing on which words those were, of course. (The winner would win William Worstword's latest volume of illusional-allyship verse) and get a place on the show "This Thought Has 22 Micro-seconds". 

Worst Words would be chosen in categories, like Worst Adjective ("systemic" would be the favourite), Worst Hybrid ("BIPOC" should win that), Worst Trans-Words meaning nouns converted to verbs (e.g. 'expensing') and verbs to nouns (an 'ask'), and Worst Epithet (if anyone still learns what an epithet is). 

Meanwhile we'll have to ban Halloween and Carnivale (they're full of spooks), and replace savage (wild) with tame, black sheep with harlequin sheep, powwow with bowwow (an off-leash dog meeting), blind spot with failure-to-see spot, and brain-storm with brain-fog, the last 2 being what we've now got.

CBC has a strong objection to the existence of "black-face", but they should be experiencing red-face. It all makes us feel very jocose in anxious times, anyway ... so thank you CBC.


Wednesday 24 November 2021

The Pandemic of Logo-phobia

Is logo-phobia yet another new mental illness? Fearing, perhaps, to offend "persons of colour", are we becoming persons of colourless speech?
We fear words themselves -- pronouns, obviously -- but why are we anti-noun? We hate them so much we turn them into verbs -- always "efforting" and "expensing", "authoring" and "evidencing" -- even though misuse of the suffix "ing" does not a verb make. 

And who knew how malevolent a lowly preposition could be? Ask someone "where are you from?" and you could be labelled a right-wing anti-immigrant bigot. A polite conversational enquiry is attacked by the Language Police.

Remember when parents advised kids to "ask others about themselves, don't just talk about yourself"? Who knows what's polite now -- what's proper etiquette? "Etiquette" comes from the French word for "ticket". No one knows what our ticket out of Language Jail might be; no wonder we fear words. They're unexploded bombs: choose the wrong one and you can be blasted right off your platform.

In fear of the Language Police we call everybody persons-experiencing-things, rather than persons being things, i.e. noun-things with names, like "addict" for instance, rather than a person-experiencing-addiction. A shop-lifter, presumably, is a person-experiencing-kleptomania (and may be called a person-experiencing-marginalization-and-underprivilege, by persons-acting-diverse-and-inclusive).
 
So am I un-empathetically linking language with moral responsibility? Yup. (Sorry.) So avoiding clear language means avoiding moral responsibility? (A non-correct question if ever there was one. Our apologies.) 

Nothing's your fault if your pronoun is "they/them" -- it's theirs. Maybe avoiding being the Subject and hiding behind Object-hood is a survival strategy, but this refusal to let the ball of responsibility and fluency land in your court is causing certain others to experience depression -- and mystification. Why do we fear words, and fear meaning what words mean? Do we fear giving offense, or are we simply persons-experiencing-mass-censorship?



.

Wednesday 17 November 2021

Is Literacy "Cultural Genocide"? How Do We Reconcile With Censorship?

How Did Literacy Come to be "Cultural Genocide"?

We need without fear to to ask questions about Canadian residential schools and "cultural genocide". Those who established the schools intended two things: to educate aboriginal people by imparting literacy and academic knowledge, and to draw aboriginals into the mainstream as employed non-dependent members of society. Would this change them? Undoubtedly. (Education is supposed to change people.) Was that "genocide"? That buzzword hadn't been invented when native schools were set up, and wouldn't have been understood. Education was education, and boarding school a common institution.

Does that mean nothing bad ever happened in them? No strict discipline, no separation from families? No, it doesn't mean that. Pedagogical theory was not what it is today, and the churches who ran many of the schools had additional agenda of their own, which now seem questionable. 

Presumably some pupils did learn to read, however. Did they learn math, and something of the world -- its history, its geography? Undoubtedly. Was that bad, from an inclusion-and-equity point of view? Presumably universal education has social value? Or do we really now think general literacy is "cultural genocide"?

Reason suggests that perpetuating an underclass of unemployable illiterates excluded from schooling would have been a lot more like cultural genocide than was establishing places where academic skills were learned.

Maybe they were under-funded and some staff were under-qualified: that we can picture. Can we not also picture that dedicated well-qualified individuals also joined residential school staffs because they had a teaching ideal of their own? A personal career goal, a desire to contribute?
 
There used to be abundant writings (histories, diaries, correspondence) describing students' positive memories of residential school -- but you won't find them now. They've been excised from the record and from library shelves; they don't fit present ideology. Censorship is no sin in present political ideology; in fact it's becoming a national pastime. Why?

Is it fair that teachers who were caring and gifted at their jobs should be lumped in with those who were the opposite? That is what we do through hysterical outbursts every time anyone suggests there might have been principled educators who went to remote lonely parts of Canada to teach first nations kids for commendable reasons. They sure didn't go for high pay and creature comforts. In their worldview, literacy mattered. We are the ones who demote it, who parrot ideological slogans out of fear of being "racist", and of being de-platformed from jobs and social media. Tell those early educators that they "stole" aboriginal languages (which had no written form at all, of course, and weren't shared among the warring tribes themselves), and they would think their descendants had gone mad.

We've gone unjust. We've marginalized and victimized many now-anonymous teachers who might have enriched the lives, in many ways, of some first nations students.

Our favourite national pastime is toppling statues of people who for better or worse built our (passably democratic and prosperous) country. Maybe a generation from now they'll erect a Memorial to the Unknown Teacher, the one who inspired a kid here and there but whose name we have made a point of erasing from the history books. That erasure will come back to bite the ideologues one day, for there's no reconciliation with censorship.





Wednesday 3 March 2021

Six Books Down -- How many more to go?

According to Dr. Seuss Enterprises, the company which publishes Dr. Seuss's rhyming punning uniquely eccentrically illustrated stories, some of them "center White-ness and White supremacy". So they've got to go (which to many a reader means they've got to be collected, as is usual for banned books. Thank you, censors!) Yet the assault on free speech is ominous. Which title's next? Which writer's next? Once Author is silenced, Reader is left holding the empty book bag. Will the world really be better without Dr. Seuss?

Horton heard nothing, and neither will you,
you won't see any Thing, neither One nor Two,
you won't go anywhere, oh me, oh my, oh no,
some thoughts you think might a Grinch-heart shrink,
and how you'd run a zoo, no one will ever know

When Mother gets home keep your gaze down low,
you had some funny fun with that odd cat you know,
but now's not the time for green eggs or ham,
nor fish one or two nor others red or blue,
or foxes in sockses or creatures named Sam

Cindy Lou Who's but a blond upstart,
she's so supremely White that to drop her would be smart,
the Lorax too's a loser, forget he ever spoke,
let your thoughts go to sleep and you can call yourself woke














The Owl and the Pussy-cat Sail the Censorship Sea


Free-lance writers have become aware that in the present political climate not everyone is welcome to submit work to publishers. Is being marginalized, racialized, POC, trans or disabled now a pre-requisite? Would an author like Edward Lear get anywhere today?

The Owl and the Pussy-cat went to sea
   In a leaky rainbow boat,
They took some honey and manuscripts
  Wrapped up like a package of hope.
The Owl looked up to the stars above
  And sang to a small guitar, 
"Oh stories and novels and lyrics and verse,
  What wonderful stories you are,
      You are,
What wonderful stories you are."

Pussy said to the owl "you elegant fowl,
  How charmingly sweet is your song,
Oh let us be published, too long we've been silenced
  by people who say we think Wrong." 

So they sailed away for a year and a day
  To the land where the Wrong-Tree grows,
And there in the wood a publisher stood
  And sternly wrinkled their nose,
      Their nose,
They sternly wrinkled their nose.

"Dear They, are you willing to read without killing
   The words of our cat-and-owl tale?"
"I'm not," said Them, "and your allyship's wrong,
   So back whence you came you must sail."

So they sailed away and self--published next day,
  Writing in freedom from fear,
Uncensored at last on the edge of the sands
  They danced with their pens in their hands,
      Their hands,
They danced with their pens in their hands.



Tuesday 2 March 2021

Libraries abandon Freedom To Read, embrace Freedom To Ban

The Little Madhouse on the Prairie

How ironic that, as Freedom To Read Week winds up in Canada, and Read Across America Day is being celebrated in the U.S., libraries are celebrating by censoring children's literature. Even old favourites like Laura Ingalls Wilder aren't immune: because some groups didn't like her “portrayals of Native Americans” the American Library Association removed her name in 2018 from its lifetime achievement award list.

Meanwhile, there have been calls to “Burn Babar” (that terrible racist white-supremacist elephant), and six Dr. Seuss titles have just been de-published by their own publisher, Dr. Seuss Enterprises. The six books in question “align with Orientalism”, says the company. Whatever Orientalism may be, we know censorship when we see it, and see it selectively applied: “... because the majority of characters in Dr. Seuss books are White, his works ... center Whiteness and White supremacy”, says the publisher, without clarifying whether books with black characters center Black supremacy, and align with Occidentalism. 

Dr. Seuss books are language-teaching, literacy-inducing open-hearted comic rhymes of tolerance and universalism, presenting these things decades before the present “equity” movement of social justice warriors had even got started. 

Now, Horton Hears a “Who on Earth is running the libraries these days?” Certainly not anyone who values freedom of speech. Once banned, Will the Cat In the Hat Ever Come Back? 





Wednesday 17 February 2021

Freedom to Read Week is when we choose what to read, but who chooses what gets published?

How ironic is it, that in the push for "diversity and inclusivity" in publishing, targeted inclusion of particular author-groups creates less diversity? Have we merely changed the books we choose to ban?

Freedom To Read Week is more important as ever. It's wonderful to meet new characters on the pages of books and listen in on what they say to each other.

Who are they though? Which characters currently populate the new releases? Editorial policies are favouring some themes over others and some author identities over others, and while we are free to read whatever we want, book and periodical editors increasingly limit what's on offer.

A typical note on a publisher's submissions page will say: “We seek writing which challenges bigotry ... we showcase literature from de-centered voices.” One even asserts that “we reserve the right to de-platform writers if they have broken our non-discrimination values”.

De-platforming a writer means de-platforming the right of readers to choose to read that writer. In the scramble to exclude authors deemed overly privileged and insufficiently “racialized”, diversity in literature is being reduced. 

Readers' “freedom to read” only makes sense in tandem with authors' freedom to choose their subject matter, and with the likelihood of their finding editors who accept their perspectives. Otherwise literature is being distorted by publishers' fear of seeming to neglect “identity” causes. The situation is not surprising, of course, as no business can afford to be accused of mis-gendering or racism, but even a slight whiff of correctness lets an evil genie out of the bottle. Who has the right to correct the thought of others? It is not the role of cultural industries to be multi-departmental re-education camps.

No author wants to be condemned for standing on the wrong side of black, indigenous and BIPOC issues, and that opens the door to self-censorship. The pressure to self-censor in the interest of popularity, meaning in the interest of being accepted for publication, is a more subtle brake on intellectual freedom than were the overt forms of censorship which librarians and publishers fought against in the past.

Fashions in opinion change under the pressure of issues in every era. We in Canada claim our Constitutional right to read freely, but it's also worth considering who determines the availability of the material we wish freely to choose. 




Tuesday 4 February 2020

Don't Lose the Plot, Writers

"Plot" is one of those glorious Middle English words of unknown parentage, those guttural and simple single syllables that reverberate with meaning. A "plot" is both a piece of ground and the plan of a play or story. The word straddles matter and mind, physical and mental, earthy and human. Plot is essential in a story -- it's the ground of meaning. In traditional story-telling it's the piece we possess, or discern, of the wild landscape of ideas and meanings we live with.

The plot is what we enclose and cultivate in story-telling, and requires a traditional beginning, middle and end: development, action, revelation, conclusion (harvest). We have narrative minds and narration requires process. From that comes meaning -- food for thought. No overlord should tell us what to grow, what to think. We must not let ourselves be dictated to, and the ideas we grow in our plots must not be censored.

The garden plot is a simple metaphor, and it should be simple to keep diverse growth in our garden of thought. The "native plant only" ideology in gardening is akin to the identitarian one in speech and writing: a form of control, of policing, of failing to dig new compost into the soil. Students and young writers need one simple writing tip: resist narrow ideology with wide reading! Fertilize your plots.



This story is reproduced from LITERARY YARD, www.literaryyard.com, 2024/02/10 It's a common fairy-tale theme -- imprisonment in a tower ...