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Self-Censorship

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There is no such thing as free, unconstrained speech. Laws and constitutions may protect us from the state when we speak our minds. But the state is just one possible constraint. Glenn Loury, one of America’s most outspoken and important intellectuals, provides a provocative and dazzling analysis of the powerful social forces that can prevent speakers from voicing unpopular views in public forums.

Every society, Loury notes, has norms to enforce. That can be a good thing: There ought to be social sanctions for, say, compulsive liars. When, however, a society shows a low degree of tolerance for speech about matters of political importance, self-censorship proliferates and public discourse and policy suffer. The answer, Loury argues, is for as many of us as possible to be braver and more human – to take a risk and unapologetically “live within the truth”.

Loury first presented these ideas in the 1990s in a celebrated and prophetic essay about “political correctness.” In Self-Censorship he expands and updates the account, deploying his analytical powers and psychological acuity to diagnose our current political climate. The result illuminates prevailing social dynamics with the same brilliant and startling effect that made the paper an instant classic thirty years ago.

Author: Loury Glenn
Publisher: POLITY PRESS
Pages: 120
ISBN: 9781509567409
Cover: Hardback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2025

Foreword

Self-Censorship in Public Discourse: A Theory of “Political Correctness” and Related Phenomena

Afterword: Self-Censorship in a Time of War

Glenn C. Loury is the Merton P. Stoltz Professor of the Social Sciences at Brown University. A distinguished economist, he is also a prominent social critic and public intellectual, writing mainly on the themes of racial inequality and social policy. He is the author of numerous books, including One by One from the Inside OutThe Anatomy of Racial Inequality, and the widely reviewed memoir Late Admissions.

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