Censorship & Cultural Regulation in the Modern Age

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Beate Müller
Rodopi, 2004 - Art - 250 pages
'Censorship' has become a fashionable topic, not only because of newly available archival material from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, but also because the 'new censorship' (inspired by the works of Foucault and Bourdieu) has widened the very concept of censorhip beyond its conventional boundaries. This volume uses these new materials and perspectives to address the relationship of censorship to cultural selection processes (such as canon formation), economic forces, social exclusion, professional marginalization, silencing through specialized discourses, communicative norms, and other forms of control and regulation.
Two articles in this collection investigate these issue theoretically. The remaining eight contributions address the issues by investigating censorial practice across time and space by looking at the closure of Paul's playhouse in 1606; the legacy of 19th century American regulations and representation of women teachers; the relationship between official and samizdat publishing in Communist Poland; the ban on Gegenwartsfilme (films about contemporary society) in East Germany in 1965/66; the censorship of modernist music in Weimar and Nazi Germany; the GDR's censorship of jazz and avantgarde music in the early 1950s; Aesopian strategies of textual resistance in the pop music of apartheid South Africa and in the stories of Mario Benedetti.
 

Contents

The Puritans The Puritaine and
33
The Censorship of Musical Modernism in Germany 19181945
63
Stakuko and the censorship of music in
87
The Case of Klein and
111
From State Monopoly to a Free Market of Ideas? Censorship in
141
Poland 19761989
165
Aesopian Strategies of Textual Resistance in the Struggle to
189
Representing the Censored Teacher
209
Towards a Redefinition of Censorship
225
Index of Names 247
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Page 8 - ... the social capacity to use this competence adequately in a determinate situation. On the other hand, there are the structures of the linguistic market, which impose themselves as a system of specific sanctions and censorships.20 It seems that the "action...

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