The Edinburgh International Book Festival is running at the moment and  has thrown up some interesting articles.  Patrick Ness put out this brilliant polemic on censorship and in particular how social media can cause problems of self-censorship for writers  worried about their words being taken out of context and misunderstood.   In the latter article China MiƩville made the point it's only really  censorship when the police show up.
This is a familiar argument and a problem with how censorship is defined.  Selena Kitt brought it up here after the problems with paypal and online retailers banning some of eXcessica’s books.   The articles around the time generated some debate with other people  making the point that it wasn’t true censorship—no government body was  actively banning the books; the booksellers were simply refusing to  stock the books, which they had every right to do.  I argued back then  that the semantics of whether or not it was technically censorship were  moot if they resulted in the same outcome.  It might not be censorship  in the pedantic sense, but the end result is still a writer being unable  to get their work out for readers to read.  There isn’t really a word  to fit this ‘soft’ form of censorship, so we tend to use censorship even though it’s not strictly accurate.
This  ‘soft’ censorship is especially appropriate to social media and I think  Ness has it spot on.  A writer either has to censor themselves and  avoid trigger topics completely, or risk something being interpreted the  wrong way and then have a baying online mob (most of whom probably  didn’t even read the original work in the first place) stomp all over  their reputation and career.
Ness raised the example of Salman Rushdie.  Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses was  not banned or censored by Western governments to my knowledge, but  after seeing what happened to Rushdie, only an incredibly brave or  reckless writer would attempt to tackle the same topics now.  Again,  this isn’t censorship in the pedantic sense, but the end result is the  same—certain work will not be available for the public to read.  It’s a  kind of censorship by the mob.
And irony of ironies, this is the week when the Save the Pearls and Weird Tales controversy  erupted on the internet, a situation that exemplifies Ness’s argument  (although I don’t think he’d thank me for drawing the line from A to B).
I  don’t want to talk about Victoria Foyt's book too much.  I’ll be charitable and  assume Foyt was aiming for an anti-racist message, but rather than hit  the target, managed to spin around 180° and fire the arrow right through  her foot.  As a result plenty of people found it racist and were  offended by it.  They were also offended that Weird Tales (a fiction  magazine with a long history) planned to run an extract.  Further  exacerbating the situation, Weird Tales had recently undergone some kind  of editorial coup, with the popular Ann VanderMeer turfed out by the  new owners.
This is where being one of those staunch Free Speech  Warriors sucks.  I fear and loathe all forms of censorship, which by  extension means I also fear and loathe Political Correctness, as it’s  another form of censorship, albeit by people with more honourable  intentions.  The moment you start to think certain things should be  banned, for the “good”, is the moment you start opening the door to  allow other people to ban other things, for their “good”, which might be  vastly different and far more narrow-minded than your own “good”.  That  door should be kept shut and firmly locked.  Unfortunately that  sometimes means ending up on the side of the river you’d rather not be.   As the famous quote goes: “I disapprove of what you say, but I will  defend to the death your right to say it.”
Of course, freedom of  speech does not mean freedom from criticism.  If someone writes  something bone-headed and stupid, someone else has the right to call  them out for writing something bone-headed and stupid.  There is,  however, a fine line between honest and deserved criticism, and hounding  a writer off the internet and leaving a smouldering crater where a  magazine once stood.
I fear the chilling effects Ness talked  about in his polemic.  Culture is poorly served if writers are grinding  their work down to tasteless gruel for fear of the PC police lurking at  their shoulder.  Free speech should mean exactly that, not “You can  write what you like, but if you write things we don’t like it’s back to  rounding up trolleys at Tesco for you.”  Our culture shouldn’t be ruled  by fear.
Given a choice between a world where people have the  freedom to write what they want and occasionally fuck it up completely,  and a world where people don't write because they're scared of an online  lynch mob coming after them if they do fuck it up, I'll take the  former.  If that means the existence of the occasional disagreeable—even bigoted—book,  it’s a price worth paying.
During the rather lively discussion  beneath The Guardian article someone made the point freedom to be  published is not the same as the right to be published.  Ultimately that  decision lies with the publisher or magazine.  They’re not obligated to  provide a platform to writers whose work they find disagreeable, same  as readers are not obligated to support businesses they find  disagreeable.
I agree with that, but this is not what happened in  this case.  Rightly or wrongly, Weird Tales had already taken the  decision to publish an extract of Foyt’s work.  Then—rightly or  wrongly—a pitchfork-wielding mob turned up at the gates and forced the  publisher into a U-turn.  In doing so they denied other readers the  chance to make up their own minds on whether or not to support the  magazine’s decision.  That choice was taken away.
This is censorship by the mob.
No matter the provocation, we should aspire to be better than this.
M.E. Hydra
