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That Book Is Dangerous!: How Moral Panic, Social Media, and the Culture Wars Are Remaking Publishing [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 369 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262057328
  • ISBN-13: 9780262057325
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 369 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262057328
  • ISBN-13: 9780262057325
Teised raamatud teemal:
An alarming expose of the new challenges to literary freedom in the age of social media when anyone with an identity and an internet connection can be a censor. In That Book Is Dangerous!, Adam Szetela investigates how well-intentioned and often successful efforts to diversify American literature have also produced serious problems for literary freedom. Although progressives are correct to be focused on right-wing attempts at legislative censorship, Szetela argues for attention to the ways that left-wing censorship controls speech within the publishing industry itself. The author draws on interviews with presidents and vice presidents at the Big Five publishers, literary agents at the most prestigious agencies, award-winning authors, editors, marketers, sensitivity readers, and other industry professionals to examine the new publishing landscape. What he finds is unsettling: mandatory sensitivity reads; morality clauses in author contracts; even censorship of dangerous books in the name of antiracism, feminism, and other forms of social justice. These changes to acquisition practices, editing policies, and other aspects of literary culture are a direct outgrowth of the culture of public outcries on X, Goodreads, Change.org, and other online platforms, where users accuse authors justifiably or not of racism, sexism, homophobia, and other transgressions. But rather than genuinely address the economic inequities of literary production, this current moral crusade over literature serves only to entrench the status quo. While the right is remaking the world in its image, he writes, the left is standing in a circular firing squad. Compellingly argued and incisively written, the book is a much-needed wake-up call for anyone who cares about reading, writing, and the publication of books as well as the generations of young readers we are raising.

Arvustused

[ A] devastating work of scholarship . . . Mr. Szetela is a courageous and capable chronicler of the publishing industrys nervous breakdown The Wall Street Journal

Fiery and insightful Szetela is a quick-witted, sarcastic cultural critic. The Washington Post

An engaging book. The Economist

An absolutely vital piece of work. The Times

Szetelas cutting debut reveals how progressives moral panic has created a chilling effect throughout the publishing industry. Publishers Weekly

The book is part sober sociological study containing dozens of interviews with editors, agents, and authorsalmost all of whom speak anonymouslyand part feisty polemic. The Daily Telegraph

A sometimes-scathing commentary on the state of the publishing industry and identity politics, for readers worried about literary freedom. Library Journal

[ A] horrifyingly compelling book offers a sobering report from the front lines of how identity politics and online pile-ons against anyone who sins against the latest pieties actually play out in the world of American publishing. The Spectator

A meticulously researched new book on the ills of contemporary literary culture Szetela offers a useful corrective. Quillette

Answers for what ails literature in todays complicated world can be found in [ Szetelas] new book. Counterpunch

With verve and erudition the unavoidable takeaway from Szetelas sharply-etched and powerfully argued book is that left-wing illiberalism has been institutionalized. The Dispatch

Szetelas book is both a strong defense of the ideals of diversity and sensitivity and an equally strong condemnation of the ways in which the sensitivity era is destroying them. Leonardo

Sadly prescient What any given case represents is subject to debate, and there are rules for reasonable discussion, familiar since at least Miltons Areopagitica or the Age of Enlightenment. As Szetela argues, we should have that debate and quit with the circular firing squads. We need to get this right. Massachusetts Review

Its been described as publishings most polarizing role: the sensitivity readers Can their work amount to a new and unhealthy form of censorship, one that prevents readers [ from] engaging with ideas and opinions that might make them feel uncomfortable, but which provide accurate insights into the world as it is or was? Well, thats part of the contention of That Book Is Dangerous! How Moral Panic, Social Media, and the Culture Wars Are Remaking Publishing. The BBC

Szetela examines how well-intentioned efforts to diversify literature have triggered a wave of censorship, from mandatory sensitivity reads to morality clauses and social mediadriven book cancellations, creating a chilling effect across publishing." The Capital Times

The situation's not over ... It's surprising that anything actually gets published ... A fascinating book." GB News

Social media backlash and review-bombing are increasingly leading to books being delayed, revised, or canceled before release ... While rooted in good intentions to promote diversity and sensitivity, the movement has evolved into a moral panic that risks stifling creativity and narrowing the bounds of free expression... And what should you do when you come across a book you violently disagree with even if it is Szetelas own work? 'Dont burn it,' he requests. 'Maybe use it to fix that wobbly leg on your office chair or maybe do some erasure poetry with it' Whatever you do, at least give others the chance to read it and make up their own minds." Big Think Adam Szetelas book is an indispensable investigation of the self-censorship happening behind closed doors inside publishers, literary agencies, and other institutions that have traditionally supported robust free speech. Even for those of us who have followed these developments with concern, his book reveals important new details and is illuminated by fascinating interdisciplinary analysis spanning the fields of law, sociology, moral philosophy, social psychology, political science, economics, and history. Szetelas own book is itself dangerousto the modern-day book burners who want to restrict the scope of what can be written and read. Nadine Strossen, John Marshall Harlan II Professor of Law Emerita, New York Law School; former President, American Civil Liberties Union; author of HATE

Szetela engagingly shows that censorship, thought-policing, and the punishment of heretics need not arise from autocratic governments or established religions. They can emerge in private organizations within a liberal democracyorganizations, ironically, whose mission would seem to be the free expression of ideas. This book should mobilize lovers of literate culture with common sense to push back on this madness. And it reminds us that censoriousness may be a part of human nature, and eternal vigilance the price of free speech. Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard University; author of Rationality

If you believe in literature and wish it to have a future, read this brilliant book. Szetela offers a sobering snapshot of our censorial moment and both suggests and partakes in the courage required to undo it. Junot Díaz, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction; author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao

This brilliant book by Adam Szetela shows us how to make sense of the profoundly destructive and illiberal culture that passes for progressivism today. He not only describes in some detail how literary production is being suppressed in the name of social sensitivity but also how the entire enterprise reflects the interests and strategies of emergent elites. If there are more books like this one, we might just manage to crawl out of the wreckage. Vivek Chibber, Professor of Sociology, New York University; author of The Class Matrix

Adam Szetelas well-researched, gutsy, insightful provocation bears eloquent witness to the concern of fellow progressives over the censorship of books in the name of progressive values. Donald E. Pease, Professor of English, Dartmouth College; author of Theodor Geisel

Adam Szetela has written an absorbing account of the moral panic that incited a rebirth of censorship in the 21st century. No other history covers the field so broadly, from writing programs to professional journalism, from young adult fiction to New Yorker contracts. His scholarship may help us to avert a second generation of trigger warnings, sensitivity readers, and morality clauses. David Bromwich, Sterling Professor of English, Yale University; author of Politics by Other Means

Compelling, illuminating, and engaging, Dangerous vividly documents the harms that arise absurdly from efforts to censor books and denounce authors, harms that must be resisted by each generation as citizens in a civilized society try to beat back, yet again, the endless presence of scolds and crusaders who would have the temerity to restrict what others can write or even read. The many examples in Dangerous are so baroque, and the fear within the publishing industry so apparent, that reading this book makes one shake ones head in dismay. Yet, shining bright light on this problem may itself help us to resist it and to do betterwhich we can. Nicholas A. Christakis, Sterling Professor of Social and Natural Science, Yale University; author of Blueprint

Adam Szetela earned his Ph.D. in English in the Department of Literatures at Cornell University. Before that, he was a visiting fellow in the Department of History at Harvard University. He writes for The Washington Post, The Guardian, Newsweek, and other publications.