felis_ultharus (
felis_ultharus) wrote2005-12-11 05:24 pm
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Postmodernism can shove its phallic metanarrative up its Foucauldian lacuna
I'm so sick of postmodernism -- I know anybody reading this journal is probably sick of my being sick of PoMo.
Today I read a particularly vile piece of trash called "'Singing Our Way Out of Darkness': Findley's Anti-Censorship Argument in Headhunter." It's a Postmodern treatment of it, and I've never seen the Postmodern hypocrisy laid more bare.
Starting with Stanley Fish's book there's No such thing As Free Speech, and It's a Good thing, too, Mark Cohen makes a typically PoMo assault on "liberal values" (Linda Hutcheon, bearer of the sacred flame of Postmodernism since Michel Foucault died, takes "liberal values" as one of her favourite targets as well).
From the conclusion:
Honestly, does censorship ever work? Canada's gay and lesbian bookstores are being eaten up by the cancer that is Canada Custom's obscenity rules -- rules supported by academics who suggested certain kinds of books were harmful. Has the banning of hate literature actually stopped hatred? Did the fatwa on Salman Rushdie bring an end to his career? How many people had never heard of Rushdie before the Ayatollah dropped the world's biggest bit of advertising into his lap?
And why is it that so many of my favourite books always make those 100-most-challenged books lists?
On another subject, I was still hoping for a bit of feedback on this paragraph, here. It's a protected entry, so you have to be logged on to see it...
Today I read a particularly vile piece of trash called "'Singing Our Way Out of Darkness': Findley's Anti-Censorship Argument in Headhunter." It's a Postmodern treatment of it, and I've never seen the Postmodern hypocrisy laid more bare.
Starting with Stanley Fish's book there's No such thing As Free Speech, and It's a Good thing, too, Mark Cohen makes a typically PoMo assault on "liberal values" (Linda Hutcheon, bearer of the sacred flame of Postmodernism since Michel Foucault died, takes "liberal values" as one of her favourite targets as well).
From the conclusion:
An overly rigid adherence to an absolute anti-censorship position is what causes liberals, often to their own consternation and clearly to the detriment of their societies, to support the right to free expression of the most heinous of hate-mongers and pornographers. As with most difficult moral issues in our society, the blind application of principle must give way to judgement. Judgement based on tests [Whose tests? Cohen's?], such as the one measuring the risk of harm [How do you measure the harm caused by a book? Maybe if it's thrown...], should be exercised in order to draw lines in a wise manner across a spectrum of menace.Well, Cohen, you've convinced me. I'm going to start going out and burning books right now. Starting with all your work. And Fish's. And Foucault's...
Honestly, does censorship ever work? Canada's gay and lesbian bookstores are being eaten up by the cancer that is Canada Custom's obscenity rules -- rules supported by academics who suggested certain kinds of books were harmful. Has the banning of hate literature actually stopped hatred? Did the fatwa on Salman Rushdie bring an end to his career? How many people had never heard of Rushdie before the Ayatollah dropped the world's biggest bit of advertising into his lap?
And why is it that so many of my favourite books always make those 100-most-challenged books lists?
On another subject, I was still hoping for a bit of feedback on this paragraph, here. It's a protected entry, so you have to be logged on to see it...
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Also, we have to get together sometime soon for coffee/chatting/Valet/Narnia/whatever... sometime after Monday, for me. Erm... Call me? When you're done with that essay of yours?
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>_<
Tuesday I see Steve and Adina and baby Michael (whom I haven't seen yet). My only other shifts at work have been cancelled for the week, so it's just Christmas shopping and election (which I don't know about yet). So yeah -- when's good for you...?
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Ah yes, we must apply judgment upon other people, because their speach is not 'good'. The person saying this only says so because he or she never in a million years imagines that he or she will be on the recieving end of this kind of policy.
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It's horrid and it makes genuinely intelligent people (read: non-bullshitters) want to turn themselves inside out with revulsion and rage. On second thought, that's not such a bad idea, that way everyone would know that if your intestines are showing, you're ipso facto not a freaking idiot.
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*now picturing the Simpsons Halloween episode where that strange gas makes everyone's bodies turn inside out*
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They can't claim ignorance, either. By the time you're going for your Master's or your PhD in the humanities, you surely have to understand the value of free speech...
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