• university slaps a TRIGGER warning on George Orwell's 1984

    From slider@1:229/2 to All on Tuesday, January 25, 2022 14:07:57
    From: slider@anashram.com

    As one of the greatest works in Britain’s literary canon, Nineteen Eighty-Four sounds a chilling warning about the dangers of censorship.

    Now staff at the University of Northampton have issued a trigger warning
    for George Orwell’s novel on the grounds that it contains ‘explicit material’ which some students may find ‘offensive and upsetting’.

    The advice, revealed following a Freedom of Information request by The
    Mail on Sunday, has infuriated critics, who say it runs contrary to the
    themes in the book.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10430597/University-slaps-trigger-warning-George-Orwells-Nineteen-Eighty-Four.html

    Published in 1949, Orwell’s dystopian story – set in a totalitarian state which persecutes individual thinking – gave the world phrases such as ‘Big Brother’, ‘Newspeak’ and ‘thought police’.


    Its plot centres on Winston Smith, a government employee who is arrested
    and tortured over an illicit love affair, but it also makes powerful
    points about what can happen to a society that doesn’t cherish academic freedoms or its own history.

    Yet it is one of several literary works which have been flagged up to
    students at Northampton who are studying a module called Identity Under Construction. They are warned that the module ‘addresses challenging
    issues related to violence, gender, sexuality, class, race, abuses, sexual abuse, political ideas and offensive language’.

    In addition to Orwell’s book, academics identify several works in the
    module that have the potential to be ‘offensive and upsetting’ including the Samuel Beckett play Endgame, the graphic novel V For Vendetta by Alan
    Moore and David Lloyd and Jeanette Winterson’s Sexing The Cherry.

    Tory MP Andrew Bridgen said: ‘There’s a certain irony that students are
    now being issued trigger warnings before reading Nineteen Eighty-Four. Our university campuses are fast becoming dystopian Big Brother zones where Newspeak is practised to diminish the range of intellectual thought and
    cancel speakers who don’t conform to it.

    ‘Too many of us – and nowhere is it more evident than our universities – have freely given up our rights to instead conform to a homogenised
    society governed by a liberal elite “protecting” us from ideas that they believe are too extreme for our sensibilities.’

    Orwell biographer David Taylor said: ‘I think 13-year-olds might find some scenes in the novel disturbing, but I don’t think anyone of undergraduate
    age is really shocked by a book any more.’

    The seminal novel has regularly been adapted for stage and screen,
    including an acclaimed film starring John Hurt.

    Northampton has also issued warnings over other modules on its English
    degree course. Students are alerted, for example, that Mark Haddon’s 2003 novel The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time includes ‘death of
    an animal, ableism and disability and offensive language’.

    References to ‘gender, sexuality, abuse, violence, self-harm, suicide’ are also flagged up in Sally Rooney’s Normal People, which was adapted for a successful BBC series in 2020 starring Daisy Edgar-Jones and Paul Mescal.

    Northampton, which gained full university status only in 2005, is ranked
    101st in a list of the UK’s 121 universities.

    A spokesman said: ‘While it is not university policy, we may warn students
    of content in relation to violence, sexual violence, domestic abuse and suicide. In these circumstances we explain to applicants as part of the recruitment process that their course will include some challenging texts.
    This is reinforced by tutors as they progress through their programme of studies.

    ‘We are aware some texts might be challenging for some students and have accounted for this when developing our courses.’

    Earlier this month, The Mail on Sunday reported how Salford University
    students have been given a ‘trigger warning’ over Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre and Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations.

    English literature undergraduates are warned of ‘scenes and discussions of violence and sexual violence in several of the primary texts’ that they
    may find ‘distressing’.

    ### - can ya believe this shit?? :D

    lol BURNING them comes next i suppose!?

    the sheer IRONY of it all totally lost on most people haha :))))

    that here's someone who famously warned us 'against' censorship,
    themselves being censored??

    and no one at these universities even NOTICED this???

    well duh! plus so much for higher learning then lol !

    (like wtf are they teachin' peeps in these universities these days??)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)