Regime-banned books are in school libraries and on indigo bookshelves at eye level for children.
REAL banned books are often decades out of print, going for hundreds of dollars used on eBay, they've been disappeared by publishers and distributors in spite of interest and demand. Others have authors who've died or been imprisoned for their ideas, yet more have been removed from city or university-wide library systems so that their "Misinformation" and "Lies" do not poison impressionable scholars.
Yet more are suppressed algorithmically, not appearing on the author's wikipedia page and not appearing in Google search if you type the author and "book" or "memoirs"... but only appearing when you already know the full title of the work (try this yourself: Type in "Pinochet Memoirs", and then type in "Pinochet: A journey through a life")
Yet others are explicitly banned, some to the point where a mere PDF on your hard drive can result in a decade-long sentence... IN THE UNITED KINGDOM, NEW ZEALAND, and AUSTRIA.
This has been a massive project. over 200 titles on the full list and 10,000 words in my "Cursory" survey.
Let me take you on a journey into the heart of the forbidden
UPDATE: Also Checkout My Addendum to The Real Banned Book list on Holocaust Revisionist Liturature
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Notes -
Every single American has read noted civil rights propoganda "To Kill a Mockingbird" in school, as well as King's "Letter from Birmingham Jail"
Hell I'm not American and both were assigned texts multiple times in the course of my "Education"
I think this varies regionally. I went to public school in the south during the 2000s and never was assigned those or any other books related to the civil rights movement. Maybe saw the "I have a dream" speech on a TV broadcast.
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Sure, but those are both very different kinds of texts to any of the works of the Dunning school, which is why Foner or C. Vann Woodward are the more apt points of comparison. Now admittedly there isn't an anti-civil rights equivalent to To Kill a Mockingbird as prominent as that book, but that is probably quite literally the only book most Americans could name on the subject. So it is 1-0 to civil rights, but that's not a huge discrepancy really.
Do you count Civil War era works like Uncle Tom’s Cabin?
We also had Huck Finn, The Color Purple and miscellaneous poetry a la Maya Angelou. One of my later classes did Invisible Man, too.
Does the Invisible Man even count as civil rights propaganda in any way? Sure, the narrator experiences loads of poverty and racism, but the pro-civil-rights reformists, communists and black nationalists he encounters don't exactly come off in a good light, either.
I was thinking of the general category of civil rights commentary. The bar for kulak to label something propaganda is pretty low.
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