Dangerous ideas : a brief history of censorship in the West, from the ancients to fake news / Eric Berkowitz.
Publisher: London : Westbourne Press, 2021Description: 376 pages.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781908906427; 9781908906434.Subject(s): Censorship -- History | Freedom of speech -- HistoryDDC classification: 303.376Item type | Current library | Class number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey | 303.376 BER (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 019107 |
Browsing House of Lords Library - Palace shelves, Shelving location: Dewey Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
303.37209421 AFT After Grenfell : | 303.375 POM This is not propaganda : adventures in the war against reality / | 303.375 STA How propaganda works / | 303.376 BER Dangerous ideas : a brief history of censorship in the West, from the ancients to fake news / | 303.3760941 WHI Ban this filth! : | 303.376094109048 SAV Northern Ireland, the BBC, and censorship in Thatcher's Britain / | 303.38 BET Understanding public opinion polls / |
1. Helping God along : speech suppression in the ancient world -- 2.The fire cure : censorship from late antiquity to Gutenberg -- 3. The printquakes of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries -- 4. Revolution, control, and frock coats in the eighteenth century -- 5. Class warfare in the nineteenth century -- 6. Trouble in mind : the early twentieth century -- 7. Screaming at the crowd in the contemporary era.
"The urge to censor is as old as the urge to speak. From the first Chinese emperor's wholesale elimination of books to the Vatican's suppression of pornography from its own collection, and on to the attack on Charlie Hebdo and the advent of Internet troll armies, words, images and ideas have always been hunted down by those trying to suppress them. In this compelling account, Eric Berkowitz reveals why and how humanity has, from the beginning, sought to silence itself. Ranging from the absurd - such as Henry VIII's decree of death for anyone who 'imagined' his demise - to claims by American slave owners that abolitionist literature should be supressed because it hurt their feelings, Berkowitz takes the reader on an unruly ride through history, highlighting the use of censorship to reinforce class, race and gender privilege and guard against offence. Elucidating phrases like 'fake news' and 'hate speech', Dangerous Ideas exposes the dangers of erasing history, how censorship has shaped our modern society and what forms it is taking today - and to what disturbing effects."-- Taken from book-cover.