.....and as long as it doesn't cause a certain very sensitive (and sadly on the rise) sector of society to faint and reach for their smelling salts....as long as it does involve any sort of criticism of the government of course
.....and as long as it doesn't cause a certain very sensitive (and sadly on the rise) sector of society to faint and reach for their smelling salts....as long as it does involve any sort of criticism of the government of course
Is that the people who are sensitive about some words being changed in a book?.....and as long as it doesn't cause a certain very sensitive (and sadly on the rise) sector of society to faint and reach for their smelling salts.
Of course in today's mad PC world you can't even say Bob's your uncle, could just as easily be your Aunt, or gender neutral father's siblingAbout time to be honest, rather than totally binning his works, a little tweak here and there, bob's ya uncle, everyone's happy.
No, it isn't.Is that the people who are sensitive about some words being changed in a book?
Thanks for putting that link up, I was looking for a new laptopOf course in today's mad PC world you can't even say Bob's your uncle, could just as easily be your Aunt, or gender neutral father's sibling
Don't you think that getting frothy about some words being changed in some children's books is a bit... ...snowflake-y?Why does this country pander to the snowflakes and woke. Pathetic
It’s cancel culture.I suppose the point is to discourage children from identifying the fatness of anything or the blackness of anything and then they won't grow to be racist or fat shaming adults. I can't believe I'm typing this in the knowledge that it's probably true.
This is exactly my view. Beautifully put.I’d generally describe myself as fairly centrist in my politics, and this sits uncomfortably with me.
On the one hand, I accept that as our culture shifts and changes, scenes written decades or even hundreds of years ago, can seem increasingly problematic.
On the other hand, a book’s cultural setting is of its time, and if an author’s works becomes so out of step with the culture of the modern day, then surely the answer is two-fold.
1. Add a short disclaimer at the front of the book reminding the reader that the book is a product of its time, and detailing what’s problematic within.
2. Drop the book from the school syllabus and move on to other authors. Allow it to become a parental or individual choice as to whether somebody reads that book.
IMO we shouldn’t be sanitising author’s works, just making sure people know why some consider the work problematic.
everyone's happy.
High time this was updated and sanitised for the 21st. Century - perhaps in txt spk?The tendre croppes, and the yonge sonne
Hath in the Ram his halfe cours yronne,
And smale foweles maken melodye.
The only people making this decision are the publishers doing it for commercial reasons with permission of the owners of the intellectual rights.I’d generally describe myself as fairly centrist in my politics, and this sits uncomfortably with me.
On the one hand, I accept that as our culture shifts and changes, scenes written decades or even hundreds of years ago, can seem increasingly problematic.
On the other hand, a book’s cultural setting is of its time, and if an author’s works becomes so out of step with the culture of the modern day, then surely the answer is two-fold.
1. Add a short disclaimer at the front of the book reminding the reader that the book is a product of its time, and detailing what’s problematic within.
2. Drop the book from the school syllabus and move on to other authors. Allow it to become a parental or individual choice as to whether somebody reads that book.
IMO we shouldn’t be sanitising author’s works, just making sure people know why some consider the work problematic.