I know what I identify you as.Yes, but he - sorry, they - will identify it as a ....?
Well yeh, but children reading it today aren't reading it as a history lesson. I read all these books to my lads when they were age approx 5 to 7 and they would have been oblivious to whether the text is 100 years old or brand new. The kids just want the story.So will be changing the wording in Mein Kampf?
Surely books, by their very nature are a view into the past. How that person felt about the world there and then. Changing them in whatever form is just distorting history. Yes you can say they are just childrens books, but they are still a part of history. You can't wipe out everything that happened in the past just because it isn't nice.
I'm sorry but that's a disgusting comment.Fat people should be shamed wherever possible . No excuse for it
Any publicity is good publicity, eh?An absolute bigot by all accounts leading to the family to apologise a few years ago.
I'd imagine this is purely a commercial decision to keep the cash rolling in and aligns the books with any new movies made.
Gender neutral Oompa Loompas tickles me - what were they before?!
not really , they cost the NHS billions and its unfair on kids . Everyone has a choice. It shouldn't be encouraged. Digressing off the thread thoughI'm sorry but that's a disgusting comment.
Quite.The people who are 'offended' by the changes are probably the least likely to every pick up a RD publication anyway! And if they are that bothered, order an old one online – they've been out for decades, I'm sure there will be loads available. Maybe from the people who don't like the original words.
Perfect post. This isn't about whether you agree or disagree with his views. This is about fairly representing his works. He is a world famous author, has sold millions of books. Who are we to re-write them? It's not right. As others have said if the publishers want to put a forward in to say when the books were written and the context of that time then fine, but don't re-write them. It isn't right.There is a word for it - bowlderisation. This dates back to Thomas Bowlder who in 1807 first published a 'family' version of Shakespeare with all the nasty bits removed. So it's not a new phenomena, the only difference being is that it always used to be viewed as being a bit of 'off': taking a piece of someone else's art and editing it to meet your own values and prejudices. Now it's accepted, even seen as 'progressive'.
As you can probably tell I'm opposed. No one has the right to edit Dahl's work without his permission, and as he's dead that won't be forthcoming. I accept that times and values change, and if his work is offensive then let it drop out of print (as Philip Pullman has suggested) and replace it with new books written by modern authors who are more in tune with the times.
PS: Whilst I'm opposed to retrospective censorship I never liked his work - or him.