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Censorship In Canadian Literature Mark Cohen

  • SKU: BELL-5665088
Censorship In Canadian Literature Mark Cohen
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Censorship In Canadian Literature Mark Cohen instant download after payment.

Publisher: McGill-Queen’s University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 11.95 MB
Pages: 224
Author: Mark Cohen
ISBN: 9780773522145, 077352214X
Language: English
Year: 2001

Product desciption

Censorship In Canadian Literature Mark Cohen by Mark Cohen 9780773522145, 077352214X instant download after payment.

Cohen critiques Timothy Findley's broad anti-censorship position; he traces Margaret Atwood's evolution from implicit support for the censorship of pornography in Bodily Harm to the rejection of censorship in The Handmaid's Tale; and he provides the first detailed study of the draft of Margaret Laurence's unfinished novel, showing the degree to which her final silence was a result of her censorship ordeal. Finally, an analysis of the writing of Beatrice Culleton and Marlene Nourbese Philip shows how different kinds of socio-cultural censorship - from gate-keepers to self-censorship - silence Native and black Canadian voices. Cohen's re-definition of censorship as essentially a practice of judgment takes us beyond the traditional Enlightenment delineation of censorship as an oppressive government practice and the consequent neutralist liberal condemnation of censorship on principle. Since judgment is enmeshed in the fabric of human endeavour, censorship is inevitable; since censorship is inevitable, Cohen concludes, debate over whether censorship itself is desirable should give way to a search for censorship practices that are more just. Censorship in Canadian Literature is an essential text for scholars of Canadian literature as well as for anyone concerned with contemporary debates about censorship and civil rights.

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