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The Work of Translation The Work of Translation
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Censorship and Catholic Scholars Censorship and Catholic Scholars
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Censorship in Practice Censorship in Practice
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5 Censorship in the Land of “Thinking on One’s Own”
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Published:August 2013
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Abstract
This chapter explores how the Roman Catholic Church's censorship system was “translated”—explained and rationalized—to the Catholic reading public and also to and by Catholic scholars, writers, and intellectuals in the twentieth century. These translations and rationales not only deal with the complexities of print culture, but also extend into popular media more generally and beyond that into discussions about the place of Catholicism in twentieth-century American life. The chapter considers how the Index of Forbidden Books was translated and transmitted in part in the classroom and how the translation created a distinct subgenre in U.S. Catholic print culture. It also explains how censorship functioned in the lives of readers and writers and concludes with a discussion of censorship's incompatibility with foundational American tenets, such as those embodied in the First Amendment.
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