Censorship and the Limits of the Literary: A Global View

Censorship and the Limits of the Literary: A Global View

by Bloomsbury Academic
Censorship and the Limits of the Literary: A Global View

Censorship and the Limits of the Literary: A Global View

by Bloomsbury Academic

Hardcover

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Overview

Though literature and censorship have been conceived as long-time adversaries, this collection seeks to understand the degree to which they have been dialectical terms, each producing the other, coeval and mutually constitutive.

On the one hand, literary censorship has been posited as not only inescapable but definitive, even foundational to speech itself. One the other, especially after the opening of the USSR's spekstrahn, those enormous collections of literature forbidden under the Soviets, the push to redefine censorship expansively has encountered cogent criticism. Scholars describing the centralised control of East German print publication, for example, have wanted to insist on the difference of pre-publication state censorship from more mundane forms of speech regulation in democracies. Work on South African apartheid censorship and book banning in colonial countries also demonstrates censorship's formative role in the institutional structures of literature beyond the metropole. Censorship and the Limits of the Literary examines these and other developments across twelve countries, from the Enlightenment to the present day, offering case studies from the French revolution to Internet China. Is literature ever without censorship? Does censorship need the literary? In a globalizing era for culture, does censorship represent the final, failed version of national control?


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781628920093
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 08/27/2015
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.62(d)

About the Author

Nicole Moore is Associate Professor in English at the University of New South Wales, Canberra, Australia. She is the author of The Censor's Library: Uncovering the Lost History of Australia's Banned Books, which was shortlisted for the Prime Minister's Australian History Prize 2013, and co-editor of The Literature of Australia (2009).

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Introduction

I


1. French Censorship on the Eve of the Revolution
Simon Burrows, University of Western Sydney, Australia


2. Not Guilty: Negative Capability and the Trials of William Hone
Clara Tuite, University of Melbourbane, Australia


3. The Gender of Censorship: John Wilson Croker, Mary Hays and the Aftermath of the Queen
Caroline Affair
Mary Spongberg, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia


4. 'The Chastity of our Records': Reading and Judging Obscenity in Nineteenth-Century Courts
Karen Crawley, Griffith University, Australia


II

5. Controlling Ideas and Controlling People: Libel, Surveillance, Banishment and Indigenous Literary
Expression in the Dutch East Indies
Paul Tickell, University of New South Wales, Canberra, Australia


6. Teaching Librarians to be Censors: Library Education for Francophones in Quebec, 1937-1961
Geoffrey Little, Concordia University, Canada


7. Surrealism to Pulp: The Limits of the Literary and Australian Customs
Nicole Moore, University of New South Wales, Canberra, Australia


8. 'That Monstrous Thing': The Critic as Censor in Apartheid South Africa
Peter D. McDonald, St Hugh's College, University of Oxford, UK


III

9. Diabolical Evasion of the Censor in Mikhail Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita
Ilona Urquhart, Deakin University, Australia


10. Reading the Enemy: East German Censorship across the Wall
Christina Spittel, University of New South Wales, Canberra, Australia


11. Wild Spiders Crying Together: Confessional Poetry, Censorship and the Cold War
Tyne Daile Sumner, University of Melbourbane, Australia


12. Freedom to Read: Barney Rosset, Henry Miller, and the End of Obscenity
Loren Glass, University of Iowa, USA


IV


13. Out of the Shadows: The Emergence of Overt Gay Narratives in Australia
Jeremy Fisher, University of New England, USA


14. Silenced Lives: Censorship and the Rise of Diasporic Iranian Women's Memoirs in English
Sanaz Fotouhi, University of New South Wales, Australia


15. Egypt's Facebook Revolution: Arab Diaspora Literature and Censorship in the Homeland
Jumana Bayeh, University of Edinburgh, UK


16. China's Elusive Truths: Censorship, Value and Literature in the Internet age
Lynda Ng, University of Oxford, UK


List of Contributors

Index

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