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Modalities of Free Speech

Candea, Matei; Heywood, Paolo; Fedirko, Taras

Authors

Matei Candea

Taras Fedirko



Abstract

While debates over freedom of speech have been a focus of renewed public and media attention over the past decade, anthropological literature focusing self-consciously and explicitly on the topic remained, until very recently, relatively thin on the ground. And yet questions of freedom of expression are treated tangentially in a range of anthropological literatures, including studies of publics, media and mediation, expertise, political subjectivity or humour. We draw these contributions together to build a synthetic account of what anthropology has had to say – directly or indirectly – about freedom of speech. Building on this literature the article argues that rather than imagine freedom of speech as the illusory opposite of our preferential understanding of communication as necessarily constrained, a more ethnographic and less parochial approach would seek to interrogate the different modalities in which ‘freedoms of speech’ are evoked, invoked, imagined, and practised.

Citation

Candea, M., Heywood, P., & Fedirko, T. (in press). Modalities of Free Speech. Annual Review of Anthropology,

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 14, 2025
Deposit Date Mar 14, 2025
Journal Annual Review of Anthropology
Print ISSN 0084-6570
Publisher Annual Reviews
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3708731
Publisher URL https://www.annualreviews.org/content/journals/anthro