Censorship of Expression in the 1980s: A Statistical Survey
By (Author) John B. Harer
By (author) Steven R. Harris
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
26th October 1994
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
363.31
Hardback
200
The study of censorship is important not because we are shocked by the contents of a book or because a complaint about a work offends our sensibilities, but rather because this conflict between powerful opposing forces in society can threaten its foundations and ideals. Conflict exists because reasonable individuals in our society disagree as to what defines the limitations of creativity and expression, and who should decide when those boundaries ahve been overstepped. These issues are addressed in detail in this important and timely new survey.
.,."any academic libraries concerned with intellectual freedom issues should own the volume. Just as Woods and Burress have become standards reference works, the present volume can confidently expect to have a similarly useful lifespan."-Journal of Academic Librarianship
...any academic libraries concerned with intellectual freedom issues should own the volume. Just as Woods and Burress have become standards reference works, the present volume can confidently expect to have a similarly useful lifespan.-Journal of Academic Librarianship
Harer and Harris provide a summary review of the literature on censorship and compare their findings with those of other sources past and present. The real value of their work is the thoughtful analysis of what happened in the 1980s in terms of such factors as the number of censorship attempts per year, the titles challenged, the state and regional distribution of incidents, the complainants, the political orientation of organized groups who originate censorship efforts, the reasons for the censorship of items, and the results of challenges.-Wilson Library Bulletin
This is an extremely comprehensive review of an important topic. Its purchase is recommended for research collections.-Australian Library Review
..."any academic libraries concerned with intellectual freedom issues should own the volume. Just as Woods and Burress have become standards reference works, the present volume can confidently expect to have a similarly useful lifespan."-Journal of Academic Librarianship
"This is an extremely comprehensive review of an important topic. Its purchase is recommended for research collections."-Australian Library Review
"Harer and Harris provide a summary review of the literature on censorship and compare their findings with those of other sources past and present. The real value of their work is the thoughtful analysis of what happened in the 1980s in terms of such factors as the number of censorship attempts per year, the titles challenged, the state and regional distribution of incidents, the complainants, the political orientation of organized groups who originate censorship efforts, the reasons for the censorship of items, and the results of challenges."-Wilson Library Bulletin
JOHN B. HARER is the head of the Circulation Division of Sterling C. Evans Library at Texas A&M University and has published a number of refereed journal articles and books. STEVEN R. HARRIS is Humanities Reference Librarian at the Sterling C. Evans Library at the Middleton Library at Louisiana State University.