America, Big Brother, and China: The ABCs of Studying Censorship
Analyze censorship from a historical and literary perspective to teach from an interdisciplinary perspective.
By Elijah Ammen
"Censorship" conjures up mental images of Soviet Russia, Nazi book burnings, and vitriolic arguments over what is considered artistic vs. obscene.
But the censorship of today is not black boxes and Parental Advisory stickers. Censorship online can be a more subtle filtering or blocking of certain websites or pages. Censorship can often go unnoticed because there are fewer physical things to alter. The fluid nature of online communication lends itself to manipulation and control, which is the core of censorship. Guide your class on an exploration of censorship to help them become advocates of free speech.
Historical Context
Modern Examples
- New Yorker longform article on censorship in art and literature
- The Guardian article on government Internet filtering systems and the progression of censorship
- Collection of New York Times articles on China's Internet censorship
- Scholarly article on how China controls opinion sharing on the Internet
- CBS article on the controversial SOPA and PIPA bills that attempted to curb Internet piracy but gave extreme liberty to government agencies to censor websites.
China's regulation in particular is a clear example of government oversight that restricts the open sharing of information that thrives on the Internet. The SOPA and PIPA bills ignited an online firestorm in 2012 with sites like Facebook, Reddit, Wikipedia, and many others protesting the amount of control it gave to the government to censor websites (many of which would not have the funds to appeal a censorship decision).
This creates a great compare-and-contrast paper or material for a debate, specifically about who gets to make the decision of when to curb free speech, and how are those decision-makers held accountable?
Classic Literature
Modern Literature
Lesson Planet Resources:
War and the Media, Freedom of Hate Speech, Fahrenheit 451, KWHL strategy, Big Brother