Censorship of the written word has proved a constant source for debate
and argument. To cut or not to cut is a question with a long and
fascinating history. First published in 1969, A Long Time Burning is
an account of the political, religious, and moral censorship of
literature, in the context of English literary history. It is
principally concerned with the evolution of a modern pattern of
censorship between the abolition of licensing in 1695 and the late
Victorian period. The author outlines the motives and methods of
censorship, illustrating these by more detailed discussion of such
cases as those involving Edmund Curll, John Wilkes, Thomas Paine,
William Hone, Richard Carlile, William Dugdale and Henry Vizetelly.
The unofficial trade in banned books and the campaigns of the
Proclamation Society; the Society for the Suppression of Vice, and the
National Vigilance Association are described with the aid of some
previously unpublished material. The book includes an anthology of
illustrative material, quoting extracts from publications banned at
various times and for various reasons. Pages from such books as Venus
in the Cloister are reprinted for the first time in more than two
centuries, while the other documents range from the Blasphemy Act of
1698 to a prosecution brought under the Race Relations Act of 1965.
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The History of Literary Censorship in England
Product details
ISBN
9781040194232
Published
2024
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author