Friday 18 June 2010

Banned Books in Australia


Well there's nothing like the smell of censorship in the air to get the juices flowing. Sure, maybe it's because we work in a library, but I think this is a topic many people feel strongly about. Whether it's a good ol' fashioned book burning, or the current internet filter discussions, freedom of speech and access to information is an age old issue.


The current exhibition that Art in the Library has been involved with, is titled Banned Books in Australia. It covers the three hot topics of Obscenity, Blasphemy and Sedition. We collected books from within our own library, personal copies of titles, as well as artwork inspired by the topic. The two main drivers for this exhibition are the Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand's Annual conference (2010) titled "To Deprave and Corrupt: Forbidden, Hidden and Censored Texts". The second driver has been around a little longer. Back in 2006 our library was forced to remove books from our shelves and lock them in a cupboard, where they could no longer be accessed. Not even for the academic context within which they were bought. You can thank the then Attorney-General Phillip Ruddock for this. And as we sit here four years later, they are still deemed too dangerous for public consumption (even though you can access the texts over the internet).


Do we need to be protected from ourselves? Check out what our academics have written on the topic, and see what books made it to the 'Banned' list. You might recognise a lot of them from your own bookshelf or as books you read in high school or at Uni. We all have a line in the sand where our moral compass in concerned. Which item in the exhibition pushes your button? Share your thoughts on the topic, or review and critique any of the books. We'd love you to join the discussion.

2 comments:

  1. Voltaire: "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."

    Voltaire 1694-1778: attributed to Voltaire, but actually S. G. Tallentyre's summary of Voltaire's attitude towards Helvétius following the burning of the latter's De l'esprit in 1759; in The Friends of Voltaire (1907)

    Sourced from the Oxford Quotations database, see other quotations on censorship:
    http://www.askoxford.com/results/?view=quot&freesearch=CENSORSHIP&branch=14123648&textsearchtype=exact

    ReplyDelete
  2. Adding a little bit more to the free speech debate is Marieke Hardy (interestingly the grand-daughter of Frank Hardy, who's book Power without Glory is in the exhibition)

    http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/06/21/2932194.htm?site=thedrum

    ReplyDelete