Wednesday, November 13, 2019
The Perpetual Battle Against Censorship Essay -- The Fight Against Cen
à  "There is more than one way to  burn a book," (176) says Ray Bradbury when explaining the reason he wrote  Fahrenheit 451. Bradbury at the time was upset about "condensed books", or books  which had been simplified for easier reading. Luckily, this fad seems to have  passed. However, he was also upset about people who wrote asking him to change  the role of women or African-Americans to make them more or less dominant in  some of his works. One of the major themes in Fahrenheit 451 was just that; a  society where everyone got what they wished and literature was eliminated  entirely so it wouldn't offend anyone. Sadly, this still continues to happen in the United States. Many books have been banned from school and public libraries because  of language, sexual innuendos, violence, religion, alternate lifestyles, and  even for being anti-family ("Challenges . . ."). Although the burning of books  simply for the sake of eradicating them is a futile effort today, as Bradbury  stated,    censoring or banning them is basically the same thing. However, should  literature be banned for offending a few? Many people don't think so, and they  have U.S. laws to back them up. Not only is the censorship of literature in  violation of the U.S. Constitution's first amendment, but it also deprives the  American people of culture and knowledge.      The main argument against censorship is, of course, the first amendment to  the Constitution of the United States. The first amendment reads "Congress shall  make no law respecting on establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free  exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the  right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a  redress of gr...              ...e American Library  Association. n.d. 13 Mar. 2014.   http://www.ala.org/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/top100    Parkinson, Sid. "Milton's Areopagitica." Discourse 14 (Fall 1995). 12 Mar. 2014.  http://www.stlawrenceinstitute.org/vol14mit.html      Remy, Richard C. United States Government: Democracy in Action. New York: The  McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2012.      "Stanton McCandlish on the CDA (fwd)." 14 Feb. 1996. 21 Feb. 2014.  http://lawlibrary.ucdavis.edu/LAWLIB/feb96/0400.html    Weisberger, Bernard A. "Chasing Smut in Every Medium." American Heritage Dec.  1997. 12 Feb. 2014.    http://www.dc.peachnet.edu/~yliu/papr/comstock.htm).      Woolsey, John M. "The Monumental Decision of the United States District Court  Rendered December 6, 1933, by Hon. John M. Woolsey Lifting the Ban on  'Ulysses.'" Ulysses. New York: Random House, 6 Dec. 1943. pp ix-xiv.      à                        
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