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Date: | Tue, 8 Feb 2005 00:23:36 EST |
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In a message dated 2/7/2005 10:42:28 AM Eastern Standard Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:
<< The Library of Congress had some problems w/ photographs of slave
plantations about a decade ago. Also some with an exhibit on Freud,
although I can't remember why. >>
All I really know about these exhibitions was what I read in the newspapers
at the time. I saved the clippings, but darned if I can find them now. To the
best of my recollection, African American employees of the Library objected
to the first show because the subject was painful for them and they demanded
that it be removed (they succeeded). In the second case, some people (probably
academics, although I don't recall the details) objected to the Freud show
simply on the grounds that Freud's theories are in disrepute and it was felt that
the mere act of doing an exhibition on one of the most influential figures of
the 20th century would be interpreted as an endorsement. The Library's
capitulation to the forces of censorship was most unfortunate and wimpy, in my
opinion.
David Haberstich
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