escritora, periodista y crítica literaria

The risk of freedom: public and private censorship

Words tend to lose their mea­ning through ove­ru­se. Free­dom, demo­cracy, cen­sorship: we colour the­se words, we pla­ce them in dubio­us com­pany and con­found them to the point whe­re they hardly recog­ni­ze them­sel­ves any more. Through repe­ti­tion they beco­me empty, and then we have to reach for the dic­tio­nary to try and recap­tu­re the ori­gi­nal mea­ning of what we want to say. The dic­tio­nary defi­nes cen­sor as: “1. one empo­we­red to jud­ge the fit­ness of manus­cripts, com­mu­ni­ca­tions, etc., for publi­ca­tion, 2. One who cen­su­res; a fault­fin­der; — to jud­ge cri­ti­cally; exa­mi­ne for fit­ness, dele­te as unsui­ta­ble”. Seve­ral words stri­ke one as omi­nous: empo­we­red and fault­fin­der, for exam­ple. Someo­ne has been given the power to find faults with someo­ne else´s wri­ting. Who empo­wers the fault­fin­der? Society, public opi­nion, that most mys­te­rious of ins­ti­tu­tions, the sys­tem? Further­mo­re, once faults having been found, they are to be dele­ted as unsui­ta­ble. Unsui­ta­ble for whom?  We have two vic­tims of cen­sorship: the wri­ter, who­se work is sub­jec­ted to such empo­we­red scru­tiny, and the poten­tial reader, who is depri­ved of his right to jud­ge for him­self. One can­not help but think of a pile of books being bur­ned in the public squa­re: books, not a musi­cal com­po­si­tion or a scul­ptu­re. William Sha­kes­pea­re, a man known —among other things— for his love of life, said that “cen­sorship is art made ton­gue-tied by autho­rity”. I call upon another wri­ter, one of impec­ca­ble moral cre­den­tials, John Mil­ton: “Who kills a man kills a reaso­na­ble crea­tu­re, God´s ima­ge, but he who des­troys a good book, kills reason itself, kills the ima­ge of God, as it were in the eye”. 

Struc­tu­ral orga­ni­za­tions have always tried to keep the pri­va­te world of the indi­vi­dual under con­trol. All crea­ti­ve and artis­tic expres­sions are sub­jec­ted to jud­ge­ment and/or cen­sorship, but none are per­se­cu­ted with such wrath as the writ­ten word. Books, wro­te Vol­tai­re in a sati­ri­cal pamph­let called Con­cer­ning the Horri­ble Dan­ger of Reading, “dis­si­pa­te igno­ran­ce, the cus­to­dian and safe­guard of well-poli­ced Sta­tes”. Books are the cur­se of dic­ta­torships, and it is the­re­fo­re logi­cal that they should be des­tro­yed with such enthu­siasm. About the year 213, the Chi­ne­se empe­ror Shih Huang-ti tried to abo­lish reading by bur­ning all the books in his realm; Cali­gu­la orde­red all the works by Homer, Vir­gil and Livy to be bur­ned; luc­kily for us, someo­ne con­si­de­red diso­be­ying the order. “The illu­sion che­rished by tho­se who burn books is that, in doing so, they are able to can­cel his­tory and abo­lish the past”, wri­tes Alber­to Man­gueli in his essay A His­tory of Reading.  He goes on to pro­vi­de some enligh­te­ning exam­ples: in 1981, the mili­tary Jun­ta under gene­ral Pino­chet ban­ned Don Qui­jo­te for its defen­se of free­dom and its attack on esta­blished autho­rity. We would like to think of this type of men­ta­lity as a thing of the past, per­tai­ning to Geor­ge Orwell´s Ministry of Truth, and incon­cei­va­ble in this our trans­tex­tual and rela­ti­vist post­mo­dern world. To dis­sua­de my reader from such unwa­rran­ted opti­mism, I shall men­tion some of the books most fre­quently ban­ned from libra­ries and public schools in the Uni­ted Sta­tes bet­ween 1990 and 1992, accor­ding to Her­bert N Foers­telii: Of Mice and Men and The Gra­pes of Wrath, by John Stein­beck; Cat­cher in the Rye, by J.D. Salin­ger: Tom Saw­yer and The Adven­tu­res of Huc­kle­berry Finn, by Mark Twain; Lord of the Flies, by William Gol­ding; The Color Pur­ple, by Ali­ce Wal­ker; The Handmaid´s Tale, by Mar­ga­ret Atwood; A Hun­dred Years of Soli­tu­de, by Gar­cia Mar­quez, and, oh sur­pri­se, Little Red Riding Hood by the brothers Grimm. I stum­bled upon this list, and —in an honest effort to find a con­nec­tion— I tried to analy­ze the offen­si­ve the­mes. Reli­gion? Hardly evi­dent. Poli­tics? Pos­sibly, in the case of Stein­beck, who pro­fes­ses such a con­cern for the rights of the indi­vi­dual against exploi­ta­tion. Femi­nism? Of cour­se, it is obvious in the works by Atwood and Wal­ker. But then, Wal­ker being a black wri­ter, another ele­ment comes up to further com­pli­ca­te mat­ters: Racism? Perhaps she sha­res a here­ti­cal point of view with Mark Twain, who­se cha­rac­ters esta­blish such deep rela­tionships in spi­te of race and social stan­ding. Or… perhaps the cen­su­ra­ble con­text in Twain is his unders­tan­ding of ado­les­cen­ce, and this would also apply to Salin­ger. Back to poli­tics, with Gar­cia Mar­quez, or the nega­ti­ve aspects of society depic­ted in Lord of the Flies…How can the indi­vi­dual be such a mena­ce to the sys­tem? All of a sud­den I saw the light. It is only the Huma­ne Society intent on pro­tec­ting the wolf from Red Riding Hood, the flies of the Lord, Steinbeck´s mice and the chil­dren with pig´s tails, —pro­duct of incest— in Gar­cia Marquez…What a relief, to be able to iden­tify the sour­ce of cen­sorship…

Cen­so­rious and repres­si­ve struc­tu­res are not always obvious. Bur­ning peo­ple or books is no lon­ger poli­ti­cally correct —although the objec­ti­ve is still attai­ned through more effi­cient means. Whe­ne­ver public and pri­va­te inter­ests con­tend the­re is a con­fron­ta­tion bet­ween the sub­jec­ti­ve free­dom of the indi­vi­dual and the autho­ri­ta­rian spi­rit of the sys­tem. Her­bert Mar­cu­se argues that advan­ced socie­ties embody a para­dox: increa­sed abun­dan­ce and satis­fac­tion of mate­rial needs along with increa­sed repres­sion in the form of exter­nal con­trols and admi­nis­tra­tion. In his book One Dimen­sio­nal Maniii he holds the view that Ame­ri­can capi­ta­lism has pre­em­pted all tra­di­tio­nal modes of oppo­si­tion merely by tole­ra­ting them, thus making tole­ran­ce itself a form of repres­sion. Most  dishear­te­ning for Mar­cu­se was the per­cep­tion that that the two most hope­ful means of libe­ra­tion, art and sexua­lity, had been absor­bed by the sys­tem and had beco­me “cogs in a cul­tu­ral machine…entertaining without endan­ge­ring”. Mar­cu­se, neverthe­less, wri­tes at a time of great empha­sis on indi­vi­dual free­dom and con­tempt for the regu­la­ting forms of the sys­tem. Now, when the­re is a uni­ver­sa­li­zing trend towards poli­ti­cal correct­ness as upheld by such regu­la­ting forms, repres­si­ve means hide behind the mask of appa­rent tole­ran­ce. “Everything is allo­wed”, says Ivan Kara­ma­zov, but the con­cept is mudd­led and beco­mes a leve­ling inhi­bi­tor of all trans­gres­sions. Albert Camus decla­res: the fact that everything is allo­wed does not imply that nothing is for­bid­den. “Absur­dity is a tie and not a liberation…if all expe­rien­ces are indif­fe­rent, that of duty is as legi­ti­ma­te as any other”.

This idea of duty com­pels us to inqui­re; is cen­sorship valid, at some spe­ci­fic time or for some spe­cial reason? No mat­ter how tole­rant we deem our­sel­ves to be, we are all con­fron­ted at some point with the tem­pta­tion to cen­su­re, although for­tu­na­tely few of us find our­sel­ves in a posi­tion to do it. Perhaps in a scho­larly mili­eu, cen­sorship would be lia­ble to focus on spe­ci­fic tar­gets. As Oscar Wil­de said, when con­fron­ted with a com­pro­mi­sing let­ter: “it is not immo­ral; much wor­se, it is badly writ­ten”. If the­re are 20 peo­ple in a room, the­re are pro­bably just as many points of view con­cer­ning what is valua­ble and what is harm­ful, all of them res­pec­ta­ble but not neces­sa­rily com­pa­ti­ble. We come thus to the best argu­ment against cen­sorship that I have ever encoun­te­red: who jud­ges? We should con­clu­de the­reof that cen­sorship is not valid under any cir­cums­tan­ces. To sti­fle the spi­rit of Pro­metheus —or  Pandora—to sup­press the natu­ral auda­city that leads to unchar­ted or dan­ge­rous terri­to­ries is to deny the pos­si­bi­lity of adven­tu­re, crea­ti­vity and pro­gress. We are well awa­re that the out­co­me of such endea­vours is not always for the best. This is evi­dent in the field of scien­ce, whe­re doors are ope­ned on to poten­tially omi­nous ground. But man needs to invent and trans­form: sto­ne into scul­ptu­re, colour into pain­ting, volu­me into archi­tec­tu­re, words into sto­ries. He is only led to mea­su­re the fore­seea­ble —and perhaps dan­ge­rous— con­se­quen­ces of his actions by the notion of duty.

The other aspect of cen­sorship is pri­va­te: it implies the volun­tary or sub­cons­cious inhi­bi­tion of self—expression. It may ori­gi­na­te in various fac­tors, but the word that comes to mind as an all-encom­pas­sing expla­na­tion is fear, of one­self or of others. Once again, wri­ting appears to be the field whe­re self-cen­sorship is at its most evi­dent: the writ­ten word decla­res, assu­mes, affirms,and the­re­fo­re beco­mes an unde­nia­ble com­mit­ment by the author.

Why do we wri­te? Is it only for love of words, of the pos­si­bi­lity of rein­ven­ting the world, of illu­mi­na­ting its dar­kest and most seduc­ti­ve cor­ners? The­re may be tho­se who satisfy this love with the work itself, and then hide or des­troy their wri­tings; we do not get to know them. Usually, the act of wri­ting invol­ves the inven­tion of the per­fect reader, he who unders­tands and iden­ti­fies with what he reads. All lite­rary work is a mes­sa­ge, a bottle thrown to sea in the hope of reaching a sym­pathe­tic accom­pli­ce; it implies the need to esta­blish cer­tain ties with the other, this other whom we ima­gi­ne and whom we intend to be read by. After all, any attempt at wri­ting is also an attempt at com­mu­ni­ca­tion. The pro­cess —and the love of this pro­cess— implies an objec­ti­ve: it is not carried out with the other in mind but it con­tem­pla­tes the reader as a secret corres­pon­dent. The rela­tionship bet­ween writer/reader invol­ves para­llel demands: the writer´s ima­gi­na­tion grows, expands, explo­res com­plex or for­bid­den ground, and the reader is drag­ged along to sha­re the adven­tu­re. Salinger´s cha­rac­ter, Sey­mour, tells his wri­ter- brother: “If only you´d remem­ber befo­re you ever sit down to wri­te that you´ve been a reader long befo­re you were ever a wri­ter. You simply fix that fact in your mind…then ask your­self, as a reader, what pie­ce of wri­ting Buddy Glass would most want to read…then sit down sha­me­lessly and wri­te the thing your­self.” iv Not the kind of advi­ce that is easy to follow, but mea­ning­ful neverthe­less: every wri­ter who honestly pre­tends to be one is, befo­re all else, a pas­sio­na­te —and also honest— reader. Perhaps our ima­gi­nary inter­lo­cu­tor is only the pro­jec­tion of that inner reader. In a cir­cu­lar pro­cess, the reader is endo­wed with the inten­tions of the wri­ter. In his essay on Coetzee, Michael Igna­tieff says: “…great wri­ting is pri­va­te: it issues from an inten­sely inner dia­lo­gue with the ima­gi­nary belo­ved. And the ima­gi­nary belo­ved is lan­gua­ge itself. A true wri­ter is fun­da­men­tally in love with lan­gua­ge, ulti­ma­tely for the sake of lan­gua­ge itself”.v

The pro­jec­tion of our writing/reading pro­cess unto the ima­gi­nary inter­lo­cu­tor deve­lops into the uncons­cious jud­ge­ment we pass on our own abi­li­ties. Through an invo­lun­tary trans­fe­ren­ce of cri­te­ria, we bes­tow upon the unk­nown reader the capa­city to apprai­se our work. Self-cen­sorship issues, the­re­fo­re, from the assign­ment of our own fears to the other, thus inves­ted with the power to jud­ge. J.M. Coetzee argues: “If the ima­gi­ned reader makes the wri­ting pos­si­ble, the censor´s erup­tion into the inner world of the wri­ter can des­troy the bond which gives a wri­ter the coura­ge to wri­te”.vi Exter­nal cen­sorship pro­vo­kes rebe­llion: the fight for free­dom which man —accor­ding to Albert Camus—, in under­ta­king it for his sake, under­ta­kes for the who­le of man­kind. In our post­mo­dern world we are con­vin­ced that truth lies within man´s pri­va­te cons­cien­ce, and can­not be decreed by public power. The other, inner cen­sors, hold a secret con­trol over words and ideas; they may be as ima­gi­nary as the reader, but if we deem the reader to be sym­pathe­tic, we think of the cen­sor as inevi­tably con­dem­na­tory. Fear of con­dem­na­tion is paraly­zing; we can­not stand naked, hel­pless, befo­re a disap­pro­ving enemy. ¿Who is this enemy? The others: all tho­se who are admit­ted to our inner cons­cien­ce through our wri­ting. The pre­sen­ce of the belo­ved reader was a sour­ce of coura­ge; its trans­for­ma­tion into a cri­tic allows him to creep into the inner­most folds of our mind, and to carry out —from within— his dis­qua­lif­ying task. Writer/reader/censor then unfold in a game of mirrors: the wri­ter pro­jects his ima­ge as it is known to him, and is sub­ject to its reflec­tion as a deto­na­tor of his crea­ti­ve pos­si­bi­li­ties. The mirror´s fun­ction is not to invent, but to reflect; it only gives back the projector´s self-con­cep­tion.

Another —and power­ful— inti­mi­da­ting ele­ment is the con­tem­po­rary urge to find auto­bio­graphy whe­re the­re is nothing but ima­gi­na­tion. In this time of inte­llec­tual voyeu­rism, it beco­mes dif­fi­cult to hide behind tra­di­tio­nal masks. Words, songs or colour are not enough to esta­blish barriers against ove­rin­ter­pre­ta­tion. Anec­do­tes are seen as an exten­sion of life, lia­ble to betray the secret pla­ce whe­re they grow. That old pie­ce of advi­ce tra­di­tio­nally given to aspi­ring wri­ters, “wri­te of what you know” beco­mes omi­nous. ¿Should I stand naked befo­re the eyes of the ima­gi­nary jud­ge crea­ted by my own inse­cu­rity? The pos­si­bi­lity of his beco­ming a sym­pathe­tic reader lies in the abi­lity to sedu­ce, and to let our­sel­ves be sedu­ced: by lan­gua­ge, by ima­ges and by the world around us.  It also lies in the con­vic­tion that every wri­ter des­cri­bes him­self, but not neces­sa­rily narra­tes him­self. His cha­rac­ters inha­bit a dif­fe­rent dimen­sion in time and spa­ce —phy­si­cal as well as metapho­ri­cal—, speak in a dif­fe­rent voi­ce, walk along alter­na­te roads.  He infu­ses them with life, together with the power to see through his eyes, to cap­tu­re an ima­ge and make it into fic­tion. In order to hold on to this dri­ve, to follow it with enthu­siasm, the wri­ter must remain the accom­pli­ce of his ima­gi­nary belo­ved, who is none other but him­self.

The risk of free­dom lies in every cha­llen­ge: def­ying the sys­tem whe­ne­ver it pro­ves to be repres­si­ve; igno­ring the con­tempt of con­ven­tio­nal com­mu­ni­ties; refu­sing to sub­mit to unac­cep­ta­ble codes. It also lies in recog­ni­zing one´s own  pro­jec­ted ima­ge, and in trans­for­ming the ima­gi­nary jud­ge into the equally ima­gi­nary reader, he  who sha­res the explo­ra­tion of that mys­te­rious terri­tory: fan­tasy. “Why is it so dif­fi­cult to grasp, this world see­mingly so near to us?”, demands Patrick Whi­te. Perhaps that recu­rrent ques­tio­ning, why do we wri­te, is what comes bet­ween this nearby world and our pos­si­bi­lity of gras­ping it. In our effort to trans­mit this world, to sedu­ce our self  —trans­mu­ted into reader— with its rein­ven­ted ima­ge, to cap­tu­re it within the net of lan­gua­ge, we abo­lish the fron­tiers that keep us apart from it, and we open the way to tell it to others. 

i  Alber­to Man­guel, Une His­to­ire de la Lec­tu­re, Actes Sud, Paris, 1997

ii Her­bert N. Froes­tel, Ban­ned in the U.S.A., Green­wood Press, 1996

iii Her­bert Mar­cu­se, One- Dimen­sio­nal Man, Bea­con Press, Bos­ton, 1964

iv J.D. Salin­ger, Sey­mour, An Intro­duc­tion, Little, Brown & Co. Bos­ton 1955

v Michael Igna­tieff, The Belo­ved, Lon­don Review of Books, Feb. 1997

vi J.M. Coetzee, Giving Offen­se: Essays on Cen­sorship, Chica­go Press, 1996.