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Censorship: The Challenge of Writing in Oppressive Regimes

Harrington, Alex

Authors



Contributors

Tobias Boes
Editor

Rebecca Braun
Editor

Emily Spiers
Editor

Abstract

Eastern Europe has been provocatively defined as ‘that part of the world where serious literature and those who produce it have traditionally been overvalued’ (Baruch Wachtel Remaining Relevant after Communism (2006)). This situation arose because of the particular modes of production and circulation of texts brought about by strict censorship and routine state interference in literary matters. This chapter illustrates how this shaped a model of the Russian writer as ‘conscience of the nation’ and opponent of tyranny. It then traces what happens to this model of authorship in the post-Soviet era in the face of different forms of censorship. Despite there no longer being official pre-publication censorship, legislation that limits freedom of expression has created the pervasive phenomenon of ‘self-censorship’ or ‘censorship readiness’ among authors and other agents in the literary field.

Citation

Harrington, A. (2020). Censorship: The Challenge of Writing in Oppressive Regimes. In T. Boes, R. Braun, & E. Spiers (Eds.), World Authorship (46-59). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198819653.013.4

Publication Date 2020
Deposit Date Nov 22, 2018
Publisher Oxford University Press
Pages 46-59
Series Title Oxford Handbook Series ‘Twenty-First Century Approaches to Literature’
Book Title World Authorship
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198819653.013.4
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1656752