Although speech in America may be more free and robust than
anywhere else on earth, censorship has maintained its grip on
American society and has even increased in recent years. Not only
is censorship occurring in many different areas of speech, but it
is also being advocated by new groups of sponsors. In recent years,
liberals have taken as active a role in censorship as have
conservatives. Of all the struggles waged in the 1960s, perhaps the
one thought victorious was that against censorship. Yet, as adults,
the generation of the 1960s is pushing a campaign of censorship
more widespread than the one it faced as youth.
In "An American Paradox," Patrick Garry examines the changing
nature of censorship and the social impulses that produce it. His
beautifully written book is a thought-provoking one about our
national psyche and the cultural wars that are generating
restrictions on speech in the arts, music, television, and even in
the universities. Garry describes fundamental contradictions and
paradoxes in a nation devoted to speech and individual freedoms.
With speech so close to the national soul, an understanding of the
censorship impulse not only may help to eliminate destructive
conflicts over censorship issues but also may contribute to a
greater appreciation and knowledge of the complexity of the
American social fabric.
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