Vinnaren i pepparkakshustävlingen!
2005-07-23, 22:01
  #37
Medlem
Eremitens avatar
Citat:

Robert Cormier's "The Chocolate War" tops the list of most challenged books of 2004, according to the American Library Association's (ALA) Office for Intellectual Freedom. The book drew complaints from parents and others concerned about the book's sexual content, offensive language, religious viewpoint and violence. This year marks the first in five in which the Harry Potter series does not top or appear on the ALA's annual list.
ALA



Här är en mycket bra länk om böcker och annat som har varit i hetluften:
http://www.thefileroom.org/documents...yHomePage.html
(Man kan välja sortering efter dates, locations, ground for censorship eller medium, sedan är det bara att klicka på en titel för att få mer information.)
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2005-08-14, 17:03
  #38
Medlem
Eremitens avatar
Här finns ett kort ljudspår med Winston Churchill:
http://www.foothilltech.org/rgeib/en...ok-burning.htm
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2005-08-14, 17:12
  #39
Medlem
Eremitens avatar
"When the regime ordered
Books with dangerous knowledge
To be burned in public and everywhere
Oxen were forced to pull, carts with books
to the bonfires, one of the persecuted poets
discovered one of the best
studying the list of the burned
disconcerted, that his books were forgotten.
He rushed to his desk, flying on wings of rage
and wrote a letter to the the authorities.
Burn me! he wrote with a quick stroke
Burn me! don't do this to me! Do not spare me!
Have I not always reported the truth in my books?
Yet now you treat me as were I a liar!
I command you: Burn me! "

Bertolt Brecht
Poem titled "The Bookburning" (Die Bücherverbrennung)
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2005-08-21, 10:09
  #40
Medlem
Eremitens avatar
Citat om censur:
http://www.nonstopenglish.com/readin...Censorship.asp
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2005-09-08, 19:16
  #41
Medlem
Eremitens avatar
Intressant läsning: Lost Memory - Libraries and Archives destroyed in the Twentieth Century / prepared for UNESCO on behalf of IFLA by Hans van der Hoeven and on behalf of ICA by Joan van Albada.
http://www.unesco.org/webworld/mdm/a...n/detruit.html
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2005-11-02, 20:58
  #42
Medlem
Eremitens avatar
Citat:

GULPORT, MISS. - Library officials in two Mississippi counties have banned late-night comedy host Jon Stewart's America (the Book) from its shelves, citing the satirical textbook's nude depictions of members of the U.S. Supreme Court.

"I've been a librarian for 40 years and this is the only book I've objected to so strongly that I wouldn't allow it to circulate," Robert Willits, director of the Jackson-George Regional Library System, told the Associated Press.

"We're not an adult bookstore. Our entire collection is open to the entire public," he said. "If they had published the book without that one picture, that one page, we'd have the book."

The ban is effective in eight libraries in the southern Mississippi counties of Jackson and George.

The inflammatory page depicts the heads of nine Supreme Court justices superimposed over naked bodies. On the facing page, there are cutouts of the judges's robes along with a caption asking readers to "restore their dignity by matching each justice with his or her respective robe."

In October, Wal-Mart also banned the book from its stores because of the page of nude judges. However, the popular chain continued to sell the book via its website.
http://www.cbc.ca/story/arts/nationa...ban050110.html
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2005-11-13, 15:46
  #43
Medlem
Eremitens avatar
Litografi från 1840 av Charles Joseph Traviès de Villers
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2005-12-24, 16:53
  #44
Medlem
Eremitens avatar
Axel Kiellands pjäs Om ett folk vill leva uruppfördes på Nya Teatern i Stockholm den 1 september 1943.
Efter premiären kom klagomål från tyskt håll. Den 3 september totalförbjöds pjäsen av den svenska regeringen.
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2005-12-30, 17:58
  #45
Medlem
tapirs avatar
2002 - Judefrågan
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2005-12-31, 03:12
  #46
Medlem
fnuskes avatar
John Toland - Christianity Not Mysterious 1696
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2005-12-31, 10:07
  #47
Medlem
Eremitens avatar
Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av fnuske
John Toland - Christianity Not Mysterious 1696
Utgiven av Lilliput Press . (Swift kallade Toland "the great Oracle of the Anti-Christians".)
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2006-01-01, 16:23
  #48
Medlem
Eremitens avatar
Citat:
A modern book burning
Nation shouldn't fear facing its failures

By STEVEN J. ROSS
For the Los Angeles Times

One of the marks of authoritarian regimes is their effort to stop the spread of knowledge and free speech. In May 1933, Nazi sympathizers in Berlin burned 20,000 "degenerate" books, many of them written by Jews and anti-fascists such as Albert Einstein, Bertolt Brecht and Franz Kafka. Here at home, slaveholders were so frightened by the power of the word that throughout the antebellum South legislatures made it a crime to teach slaves to read and write.

Now, Lynne Cheney, Vice President Dick Cheney's wife and the former head of the National Endowment for the Humanities, has placed herself in the company of dictators and slaveholders. At her urging, the Education Department destroyed more than 300,000 copies of a booklet designed to help parents and children learn more about America's past.

Cheney objected to the booklet's reference to the National Standards for History, guidelines for teaching history in secondary schools that were developed at the University of California, Los Angeles in the 1990s and that suggest that American history should be taught with an eye not only to America's successes but to its struggles and dark moments as well.

Cheney could learn important lessons from the kind of history she apparently finds so un-American.

One is that the lines between authoritarianism and democracy have never been as sharply drawn as we might think. In his latest novel, The Plot Against America, Philip Roth describes what the United States might have been like if voters had spurned Franklin D. Roosevelt and elected Charles Lindbergh, an anti-Semite and admirer of Adolf Hitler, as their president in 1940. In 1935, Sinclair Lewis'It Can't Happen Here presented a scenario in which newly elected President Berzelius "Buzz"Windrip, the demagogic darling of big business and religious extremists, stripped Americans of their rights, destroying the power of the legislature and judiciary and installing a fascist dictatorship.

What was so horrible about the National Standards for History that any reference to them would merit the mass destruction of several hundred thousand volumes of knowledge?

According to Cheney, the standards failed to recognize the achievements of America's traditional heroes and focused instead on the accomplishments of women, minorities and radicals such as Harriet Tubman, the former slave who helped found the Underground Railroad. As Cheney wrote in 1994, "We are a better people than the national standards indicate, and our children deserve to know it."

Cheney insisted that the standards focused too much on the negatives of the past, on the presence of such stains on our democratic legacy as the Ku Klux Klan and McCarthyism, and not enough on great heroic figures such as Paul Revere, Gen. Robert E. Lee and the Wright brothers.

What Cheney really opposes is the prominent place that "social history" has assumed over the last 30 years. Known among its practitioners as "history from the bottom up," social historians argue that American history has too often been taught as the history of famous white men, political parties and industrialists.

Far less attention has been paid to the history of the "ordinary" people who helped build our nation. Social historians do not reject the important contributions of the former, as Cheney has repeatedly insisted. Rather, they suggest that there are two American histories worth knowing: the history of the nation and the history of its peoples. The latter is composed of a number of different histories: the history of rich and poor; of employers and employees; of men and women; of blacks, whites, Asians and Indians; of Protestants, Catholics and Jews.

As someone who has taught, written about and studied history for more than 25 years, I would suggest that good historical writing tries to help us understand the full contours of the past, paying equal attention to our triumphs and tragedies.

Historians should not be afraid to hail the heroic figures of the past, but those should also include the less-than-famous men and women who struggled on behalf of democracy. Likewise, historians should never avoid dealing with the dark stories of our past - such as slavery, the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II and McCarthyism. As our founding fathers understood, democracies are not perfect; they only grow stronger by learning from the mistakes of the past.

Destroying books that disagree with one's vision of history will never take us closer to truth and freedom. As President Eisenhower warned Dartmouth College graduates in June 1953: "Don't think you're going to conceal faults by concealing evidence that they ever existed." His words remain true today.

http://www.concordmonitor.com/apps/p...12/1037/NEWS04
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