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For Immediate Release
Contact: Judith Platt (AAP)
(202) 220-4551
November
29, 2000, Washington, DC: A prestigious group of national
organizations representing authors, publishers, booksellers and
librarians, today warned that proposals to censor media violence
pose a real threat to fundamental free speech rights and are the
wrong way to deal with violence in society. The warning came in
a joint statement charging that
the various "solutions" being touted in Washington, which involve
either direct government regulation of content or government pressure
to force the media to self-censor, "would extract an unacceptably
high price in terms of eroding our fundamental guarantees of free
expression." The statement was signed by the American Booksellers
Foundation for Free Expression, the American Society of Journalists
and Authors, the Association of American Publishers, the Association
of American University Presses, the Authors Guild, the Freedom
to Read Foundation, and PEN American Center.
The statement, which maintains
that "the root causes of violence in society lie beyond violent portrayals by
the media," comes at a time when widespread assumptions of a causal link between
violent media and violent behavior are being seriously questioned. Shooting
the Messenger, a report issued by the Media Coalition this summer, concluded
that existing research does not support the contention that media causes real
life violence. Richard Rhodes, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Why They Kill,
stated flatly in a recent article that "the presumption that gory movies, television
and games make kids violent is based on shoddy science...." And a group of respected
scholars and authors specializing in the field of media and communications recently
filed a friend-of-the-court brief expressing their concern about "the misrepresentations
and distortions that have, for many years, characterized political discourse on
social science research in the effects of 'media violence'."
The joint statement maintains
that it is not the role of government to evaluate the merits of expression, nor
to separate "good" from "bad" speech. "It is by exposing, confronting and addressing
controversial speech, not by hiding it beneath a veil of censorship, that the
merits of that speech can be tested," the statement says, adding that it is the
responsibility of parents to determine what materials are appropriate for their
children, and themselves. "If the media misread the degree of public interest
in or tolerance for particular fare-violent or otherwise-surely the swiftest way
for the public to get that message across...is at the box office, the book or
record store, or via the channel selector of a television set."
The complete
text of "Violence in the Media: A Joint Statement," is attached.
The American Booksellers
Foundation for Free Expression was created by the American Booksellers Association
in 1990. It is the bookseller's voice in the fight against censorship. For additional
information: Chris Finan, (212) 587-4025.
The American Society
of Journalists and Authors is the national organization of leading non-fiction
writers. An important part of the Society's mission to promote the professional
welfare of journalists and authors is its active, long-standing defense of the
First Amendment and its deep concern for censorship issues. For additional information:
Brett Harvey, (212) 997-0947.
The Association of American
Publishers is the national trade association of the U.S. book publishing industry.
AAP's approximately 280 members include most of the major commercial book publishers
in the United States, as well as smaller and non-profit publishers, university
presses and scholarly societies. The Association represents an industry whose
very existence depends upon the free exercise of rights guaranteed by the First
Amendment. For additional information: Judith Platt, (202) 220-4551.
The Association of American
University Presses is the largest and oldest organization of nonprofit scholarly
publishers in the world, with members located in 42 states and the District of
Columbia. Each year its members publish around 9,000 books and over 700 quarterly
journals, covering virtually every field of intellectual and literary endeavor.
For additional information:; Derek Krissoff, (212) 989-1010.
The Authors Guild,
founded in 1912, is a national non-profit association of more than 8,000 professional,
published writers of all genres-- journalists, historians, biographers, and other
writers of non-fiction and fiction. The Guild counts among its members Nobel laureates,
Pulitzer Prize winners, recipients of National Book Awards, and other honors.
For additional information: Kay Murray, (212) 563-5904.
The Freedom to Read Foundation
is a non-profit membership organization established in 1969 by the American Library
Association to promote and defend First Amendment rights, support the rights of
libraries to include in their collections and make available to the public any
work they may legally acquire, and help shape legal precedent for the freedom
to read on behalf of all citizens. For additional information: Judith Krug, (312)
280-4222.
PEN American Center
is a fellowship of writers with more than 2,700 members. PEN encourages a more
vigorous community of letters through initiatives on behalf of free expression,
educational programs fostering a greater appreciation of literature, and public
forums. PEN supports professional writers with publications, literary awards,
and assistance to writers in financial need. For additional information: Michael
Roberts, (212) 334-1660, ext. 103.
VIOLENCE
IN THE MEDIA: A JOINT STATEMENT
The undersigned organizations,
whose members represent a broad cross-section of the book community in America,
believe that concerns being expressed over portrayals of violence in the media,
including films, television, music, and video games, as well as communication
via the Internet, are generating demands for action that threaten core First Amendment
freedoms. The frenetic search for ways to deal with this perceived problem has
produced "solutions" that involve either direct government regulation of content
or offers to stay the government's hand if the media "clean up their act," that
is, engage in self-censorship or labeling practices.
However legitimate the concerns,
the proposed cures are worse than the illness. They would extract an unacceptably
high price in terms of eroding our fundamental guarantees of free expression.
The authors, publishers, booksellers, and librarians who have joined in this statement
have often faced criticism over the allegedly harmful effects of the books that
they write, publish and make available- books that deal with all aspects of human
experience. Our consistent response has been to remind our critics - and interested
legislators and judges - of the fundamental precepts of free expression that must
guide our society's judgments in these matters.
These first principles,
which have allowed the book world to flourish, apply equally to all media of expression.
Among them:
1. Censorship is not
the answer to violence in society. The root causes of violence in society
lie beyond violent portrayals by the media. This being so, the search for solutions
must go beyond facile censorship initiatives, which inevitably compromise our
fundamental freedom of expression, and instead seek out and attack these root
causes. The problem is complex; so, too, are its solutions. There is no "quick
fix," and we deceive ourselves if we embrace the view that stifling the media
messenger will blot out the sometimes disturbing messages it conveys.
2. The First Amendment
protects the widest range of expression. The First Amendment, whether embodied
in the freedom to speak, to read, or to communicate through electronic media,
is grounded in the proposition that the widest possible array of views and expression
must be protected. The strength of the First Amendment lies in the diversity it
promotes - the freedom to speak one's mind, to read or watch what one pleases
- however out-of-favor, offensive, or irreverent it may be.
3. It is not properly
the role of the government to evaluate the merits of expression. An underlying
premise of free expression is the recognition that no individual or group, let
alone a governmental body, possesses the wisdom to separate "good" from "bad"
speech (violent or otherwise); to identify valid versus invalid premises in the
elusive search for truth; nor to gauge what speech will promote a better body
politic or enhance individual self-fulfillment. This enlightenment is, instead,
left to the outcome of a cacophony of speech, clashing - often brilliantly, sometimes
banally - in the "marketplace of ideas." It is by exposing, confronting, and addressing
controversial speech, not by hiding it beneath a veil of censorship, that the
merits of that speech can be tested. In the words of the great Justice Brandeis,
the best antidote for false speech is "more speech, not enforced silence."
4. Evaluating the worth
of expression is subjective. The controversy over depictions of violence in
the media underscores the futility of attempting to define "acceptable" content.
Few, if any, would argue that portrayals of violence play no proper role in works
of expression. Rather, most critics take issue with certain portrayals of violence
in certain works. Every critic, however, has a unique parade of horrors; no two
critics' lists are the same. Indeed, works that some critics deem to be the least
"worthy" are deemed by others to be of great value. Judgments as to what constitutes
"good" versus "bad" portrayals of violence often tell us more about the sensibilities
or politics of the critic than about the "intrinsic worth" of the expression.
Experience counsels, moreover, that public tastes and standards of "acceptability"
shift dramatically over time. Many books, plays and movies that once were targets
of censorship are today revered as classics. If sure-footedness along the path
of "desirable" and "undesirable" speech has eluded us for more than 200 years,
it is highly improbable that we are now graced with clear vision as to what constitutes
desirable and undesirable expression in the form of media portrayals of violence.
5. Portrayals of violence
in the media reflect a violent world. Book authors, publishers, booksellers
and librarians, along with those engaged in creating and distributing other media,
strive to enrich the quality and diversity of thought and expression. But it is
also evident that authors, composers, and other creators draw centrally on both
history and contemporary culture as sources of inspiration. Before we too quickly
condemn media portrayals of violence, we must ask ourselves the degree to which
they mirror life experience. One need only turn on the nightly news to be reminded
of the pervasiveness of violence in our society. Nor are commentaries on and depictions
of violence a recent phenomenon. Throughout history, violence has been a matter
of public fascination and absorption, as the Bible, The Iliad, and the
works of Shakespeare attest. That today's media continue to reflect this enduring
aspect of our culture is neither surprising nor a basis for condemnation.
6. Individuals, not the
government, bear responsibility for determining what materials are appropriate
for themselves and their children. Parents must play the primary role in shaping
their children's media choices, and they must prepare their children for the wide
range of material and information to which they will be exposed in a free society.
The answer to perceived gratuitous violence or demeaning portrayals in the media
is not the heavy hand of government censorship, but the conscious control of one's
(and one's children's) consumption and choices. The freedom to read, watch, and
listen also entails the privilege not to do any of these and to discourage or
prohibit one's children from reading, watching, or listening to particular materials
- at all or in excess. If the media misread the degree of public interest in or
tolerance for particular fare - violent or otherwise - surely the swiftest way
for the public to get that message across in our free-market economy is at the
box office, the book or record store, or via the channel selector of a television
set.
The foregoing principles
apply with equal force to the Internet. Even in its early development, the Internet
offers unique promise as a communication medium. The very novelty of the Internet
affords breathtaking new speech vistas; at the same time, its ubiquitousness has
fueled rash censorship initiatives that would severely limit, if not block from
attainment altogether, those new speech horizons. As with our treatment of the
media that preceded it, the Internet must be left to develop with an appreciation
that concern for our children and fundamental speech freedoms are not mutually
exclusive, and that we do not have to sacrifice one for the other, but can - and
must - find ways to nurture both.
American
Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression
American Society of Journalists and Authors
Association of American Publishers, Inc.
Association of American University Presses
Authors Guild
Freedom to Read Foundation
PEN American Center
11/29/00
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