What
Is Your Definition
of "Censorship"?
Books, films, music, and
works of art have been suppressed, altered, expurgated, bleeped, blackened,
cut, burned, or bowdlerized. Writers and artists have been imprisoned,
fined, fired, or silenced. Wearing many masks, censorship has appeared
in our living rooms under the names "national security," "classification,"
and "selective inclusion." Books have been removed from shelves or never
been published at all. Artistic visions have been circumscribed or lost.
Scientific and official state documents, positing objectivity, have
not remained immune from the red pen. Cloaked in the voice of authority,
they have advanced particular viewpoints and biases to the extent that
other voices have been silenced. In a context where the Bible has been
censored, dictionaries edited, and histories rewritten, we have all
been affected on a daily level. Even in the new millennium, we confront
the censorship debate. On computer screens throughout the world, questions
regarding access to information on the Internet are defining the next
battleground for the debate about freedom of speech.
This exhibition hopes not
so much to judge censors and censorship but instead to provoke questions.
Every day some form of censorship occurs in the United States. This
prevalence of the red pen in a country founded on the Bill of Rights
suggests that most people consider some things or ideas too dangerous
or offensive to be made widely available. Is there a line in the sand?
And if so, where do you stand? Where are your limits of tolerance? As
you move through the exhibition, we invite you to consider whether or
not there are restrictions which you might impose on the First Amendment.
Are there situations in which you might support the suppression of materials
or ideas? Note, also, the silence which accompanies your journey through
the exhibition, a poignant reminder of the voices suppressed through
the ages.