I recently read John Milton's Areopagitica. This essay is an appeal to the Papacy to drop the legislative censorship act that they had just put into motion. It's a selfish piece. Milton was viewed as heretic by many church members and he was afraid of his work being censored or unpublished. However, regardless of his intention in writing it, the meaning inside of it is relevant: you need to read all kinds of books to decide what you think is right or wrong and you should never be limited in your intellectual - and ultimately moral - journey.
For Milton, books are not just things we passively observe. They are active, alive beings that we must consume. The more we consume, the more we can figure out our personal ethos and the more we will be able to see right from wrong. If books that are deemed wrong by "tyranny and susperstition"* then members of society who can read will all begin to think the same, and in thinking the same there can never be any change.
I've pulled a few quotes for you that resonating strongly with me, as a reader:
"...for books are not absolutely dead things, but do contain a potency of life in them to be as active as that soul was whose progeny they are; nay they do preserve as in a vial the purest efficacy and extraction of that living intellect that bred them."
"... as good almost kill a man as kill a good book: who kills a man kills a reasonable creature, God's image; but he who destroys a good book kills reason itself..."
Killing a book is worse than killing a human being in the eyes of Milton because you are killing the living essence of reason. Censorship is the act of killing reason.
I thought it would be good to look three banned books and explain why they were banned:
Madam Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
Why was it banned?: It was banned because it went against "public morals" due to the wife taking on a lover while she was married.** Although books with men taking female lovers haven't seemed to have ever been banned.
1984 by George Orwell
Why was it banned?: It was banned by the USSR because Stalin recognized it as a satire on his leadership. He didn't want a revolution to take place. The US almost banned this book as well during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee.
Why was it banned?: It was banned due to the racial slurs, profanity, rape and other unpleasant images in the novel. It is still one of the most challenged novels in schools today.
I chose these three books to focus on because I wanted to point out why different books are banned. A woman taking control of her sexuality is scary and must be banned. The people realizing how terrible their government is and being incited to revolution is scary and must be banned. Racial slurs, rape, etc. is offensive and must be banned. And these things must be banned even if the larger message, like Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, is actually anti-racism. The books must be banned even if their message is one of the most revolutionary ones of history, because it contains "dirty words."
Establishments will come up with any reason to ban a book, whether it be for sexual, religious or political reasons. They will mask these reasons by trying to tell you that banning these books is "good for you" and "protecting your innocence." But it's not. It's good for them, not for you, and the act of censorship will never be beneficial to the individual. Of course, you can run the risk of being "contaminated," and beginning to think in a more violent way, for example, but that is where Milton's personal ethos comes into play: that we must read as much as possible, see the reactions and the failures in history and literature, to grow and expand as a people. As readers, and as people, I hope we will continue to fight for our literary freedom.
* All quotes by Milton come from the Oxford World's Classics John Milton: The Major Works.
** Information comes from Wikipedia and Bannedbooks.world.
To Kill A Mockingbird will always be a special book to me. Yes, it challenges a lot of ideals. But these are realistic ideals and this book definitely opened up my mind to it.
ReplyDeleteWhich proves the point of my post. :)
DeleteI love this post! I love To Kill a Mockingbird! It's one of my favorite books. I'm really glad you did this post it brings a lot of awareness to banned books :)
ReplyDeleteThanks! It's such a shame that books are still banned today but I hope one day the practice will be see as barbaric and something of the past.
DeleteWhy is 1984 still banned today? Because as each year goes by, the book sounds more and more like today's reality! George Orwell would be calling for a revolution if he were in America today. LOL
ReplyDeleteGuy Vestal @ Counter Culture Critic
Mmm, I actually disagree. I think he'd be calling for some of us to wake up before we get there, but I think America is more on a Brave New World path than a 1984 path if we're talking conspiracy or dystopian universes.
DeleteGuy, I hope you see this. I've tried to comment on your blog/contact you and every time I do I get a "technical error" and my comment doesn't get through. I will try again later. I just don't want you to think I'm ignoring your blog. I saw your review of the play. It sounds awesome!
DeleteI aven't read any of those *hides head in shame* but I should, right?! Because now we can! I know, there are many more books that were banned and I'm just so greatful to be living in a country where there are so many liberties.
ReplyDeleteRead them! ;) Madam Bovary is written kind of strange, in my opinion, although maybe that was because I read it when I was 15 and hadn't been introduced to modern writing before. Now that I've read Joyce... I feel more qualified, lolol. I'm grateful, too, but banning is still happening, even today. It baffles me.
DeleteWHAT A GREAT POST (yes, in capital letters because it was that great!)
ReplyDeleteI didn't know the #BannedBooksWeek was a thing until I saw a video from Dylanbooks. And you know what saddens me the most? that this practice still exist. One might think that in the 21st century every piece of literature in general could be read but no, there is still a lot of censorship and it basically sucks.
I really recommend you also check out Books and Pieces' video on Banned Books, too. ALL of her videos are excellent and insightful. You would think that the concept of censorship would be gone, but we see it everywhere and in the most manipulative of ways. Very disturbing.
DeleteThank you for your comment & the compliment! :)
I LOVED THIS POST! I think it really brings awareness to the problem of censorship. Certainly books shouldn't be banned for everyone.
ReplyDeleteTHANK YOU! :) And books shouldn't be banned for anyone ever. It sucks that it still goes on today. :( John Milton had it right, no matter how selfish the Areopagitica is, lol.
DeleteAnd let's not forget The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. It was first banned in 1885, a year after it's release. Nowadays, it's frequently challenged for offensive language, being racially insensitive and perpetuating racism because of its frequent use of the "N" word. In fact I think Huckleberry Finn promotes anti-racism. How else could Huck and Jim, with their differences in race and social/economic status form a bond of trust and love, loyalty and friendship?
ReplyDeleteRight!? And that is another book that is STILL challenged very often, even today, over its language. It's so easy to get caught up in surface problems without seeing the deeper meaning, because you're totally correct - it is a completely anti-racism story.
Delete