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This is the beginning of the "Censorship Incident" form. You can use this form to create a new article page about a censorship case.
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[[File:Aristoph.jpg?|left|200px]]
'''Artist:''' Aristophanes
 
'''Confronting Bodies:''' Plutarch, United States customs, Nazi occupation authorities, Greek military
 
'''Dates of Action:''' A.D. 66, 1942, 1954, 1967
 
'''Location:''' Greece, United States
 
'''Description of Artwork:''' ''The Clouds'' 423 B.C.: Comedy, an attack on the 'modern' education and morals as imported and taught by Sophists. in this play Socrates and his pupils are ridiculed, and at the end of it, their school, the Phrontisterion (thinking school) is burned to the ground. Socrates is pilloried as a typical representative of impious and destructive speculations.
 
''The Birds'' 414 B.C.: Comedy of fantasy. Some scholars see it as a political satire on the imperialistic dreams that had led the Athenians to undertake their ill-starred expedition of 415 B.C. against Syracuse Sicily.
 
''[[Lysistrata]]'' 411 B.C. Play depicting the seizure of Acropolis and of the treasury of Athens.
 
'''The Incident:'''  A.D. 66 His comedies were considered obscene by Plutarch
 
1930 United States : Customs ban lifted on ''[[Lysistrata]]''. During the period of prohibition the book was published and sold for as little as thirty-five cents; and the drama was played in New York and Philadelphia as adapted by Gilbert Seldes.  


== First Time Adding a Case? ==
1942 Athens, Greece : performance of classic Greek plays banned by Nazi occupation authorities.  
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== Ready To Start? ==
1954 United States : Post Office officials seized a copy of the 1926 translation of ''[[Lysistrata]]'', by Jack Lindsay, addressed by Fanfrolico Press, England, to Harry A. Levinson, Beverly Hills bookseller. The Post Office quickly reversed itself and delivered the book, but only because it was "not for general distribution".  
* To begin your new page, enter your title below (if a page with that name already exists, you will be sent to a form to edit that page)
* Remember to name your case after the work that was censored. [[Censorpedia:Naming Conventions | Check out our naming guidelines]] for more details and exceptions.


1967 Athens, Greece : The military clique then ruling the country banned a number of classic plays, including those named above, presumably because of their independent and antiwar themes.


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'''Free text:'''
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<p>Censorpedia aids the fight for free expression by providing a repository of censorship incidents, information about what is vulnerable to censorship, and a guide to strategies and tactics that have defeated past attempts at censorship.
It hosts articles documenting censorship outbreaks: the who, what, when, where and why.</p>
<p>Censorpedia builds on the 1994 art project/internet censorship archive The File Room. Initiated by Muntadas, The File Room was originally produced by Chicago’s Randolph Street Gallery with the support of the School of Art and Design and the Electronic Visualization Laboratory at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Since 2001 The File Room has been hosted and maintained by the National Coalition Against Censorship. </p>


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Revision as of 19:30, 27 July 2016

Featured case


Artist: Aristophanes

Confronting Bodies: Plutarch, United States customs, Nazi occupation authorities, Greek military

Dates of Action: A.D. 66, 1942, 1954, 1967

Location: Greece, United States

Description of Artwork: The Clouds 423 B.C.: Comedy, an attack on the 'modern' education and morals as imported and taught by Sophists. in this play Socrates and his pupils are ridiculed, and at the end of it, their school, the Phrontisterion (thinking school) is burned to the ground. Socrates is pilloried as a typical representative of impious and destructive speculations.

The Birds 414 B.C.: Comedy of fantasy. Some scholars see it as a political satire on the imperialistic dreams that had led the Athenians to undertake their ill-starred expedition of 415 B.C. against Syracuse Sicily.

Lysistrata 411 B.C. Play depicting the seizure of Acropolis and of the treasury of Athens.

The Incident: A.D. 66 His comedies were considered obscene by Plutarch

1930 United States : Customs ban lifted on Lysistrata. During the period of prohibition the book was published and sold for as little as thirty-five cents; and the drama was played in New York and Philadelphia as adapted by Gilbert Seldes.

1942 Athens, Greece : performance of classic Greek plays banned by Nazi occupation authorities.

1954 United States : Post Office officials seized a copy of the 1926 translation of Lysistrata, by Jack Lindsay, addressed by Fanfrolico Press, England, to Harry A. Levinson, Beverly Hills bookseller. The Post Office quickly reversed itself and delivered the book, but only because it was "not for general distribution".

1967 Athens, Greece : The military clique then ruling the country banned a number of classic plays, including those named above, presumably because of their independent and antiwar themes.

Read more....


What is Censorpedia?

Censorpedia is an online encyclopedia of censorship cases involving the arts. You can:

  • add a case
  • browse by country
  • browse by media
  • browse by subject
  • search all entries

Censorpedia aids the fight for free expression by providing a repository of censorship incidents, information about what is vulnerable to censorship, and a guide to strategies and tactics that have defeated past attempts at censorship. It hosts articles documenting censorship outbreaks: the who, what, when, where and why.

Censorpedia builds on the 1994 art project/internet censorship archive The File Room. Initiated by Muntadas, The File Room was originally produced by Chicago’s Randolph Street Gallery with the support of the School of Art and Design and the Electronic Visualization Laboratory at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Since 2001 The File Room has been hosted and maintained by the National Coalition Against Censorship.