Book burning

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Image:BurningBooks-gmaxwell.jpg Book burning is the practice of ceremoniously destroying by fire one or more copies of a book or other written material. In modern times other forms of media, such as gramophone records, CDs and video tapes, have also been ceremoniously burned or shredded. The practice, often carried out publicly, is usually motivated by moral, political or religious objections to the material.

"Burning books and killing scholars" in 212 BC is counted as the greatest crime of Qin Shi Huang of China.

The writer Heinrich Heine famously wrote in 1821 "Where they burn books, they will end in burning human beings."— Dort, wo man Bücher verbrennt, verbrennt man am Ende auch Menschen (in his play Almansor). Just over a century later the Nazis did exactly as Heine had predicted.

The Ray Bradbury novel Fahrenheit 451 is about a fictional future society that has institutionalized book burning.

Image:1933-may-10-berlin-book-burning.JPG

Many people find book burning to be offensive for a variety of reasons. Some feel it is a form of censorship that religious or political leaders practice against those ideas that they oppose. This is especially true of Nazi Germany under Adolf Hitler. Those who oppose book burning on those grounds often equate those who burn books with Nazis.

Burning books in public may simply draw unwanted attention to them. Books collected by the authorities and privately disposed of should be counted among books that have effectively been "burnt." "In AD 367, Athanasius the zealous bishop of Alexandria,... issued an Easter letter in which he demanded that Egyptian monks destroy all such [unacceptable] writings, except for those he specifically listed as 'acceptable' even 'canonical'— a list that constitutes virtually all our present 'New Testament'" (Pagels p 97). Heretical texts do not turn up as palimpsests, washed clean and overwritten, as pagan ones do; thus, in this manner many early Christian texts have been as thoroughly "lost" as if they had been publicly burnt.

The advent of the digital age has resulted in an immense collection of written work being cataloged exclusively or primarily in digital form. The intentional deletion or removal of these works has been often referred to as a new form of book burning. This reference is more closely related to the relationship between book burning and censorship than the systematic and categorical elimination of a particular body of literary work. This particular application of the term is often misused by embittered content creators who do not understand the rights of a hosting service or community to select and censor content located on its own services or within its community borders. Book burning does not refer to individual censorship, but rather to an act of mass censorship, and the term is applied appropriately only when these types of digital cases are suspected to be epidemic or widespread and systemic.

Contents

Notable book burning incidents

In fiction

The first part of Don Quixote has a scene in which the priest and the housekeeper of the knight go through the chivalry books that have turned him mad. In a kind of auto de fe, they burn most of them. The comments of the priest express the literary tastes of Cervantes. It is notable that he saves Tirant lo Blanch.

In the introduction of the 1967 Simon and Schuster book club editon of Fahrenheit 451 Ray Bradbury implies that the Nazi book burnings drove him to write the short story/novella the Fireman which was the precursor along with the foundation for his novel Fahrenheit 451 (451°F being the temperature at which paper burns), stating "It follows then that when Hitler burned a book I felt it as keenly, please forgive me, as his killing a human, for in the long sum of history they are one in the same flesh."

In one episode of The Simpsons, Lisa Simpson sees a Book-Mobile, however the letters are behind a tree and it actually reads Book-Burning-Mobile.

See also

External links

Sources

  • Pagels, Elaine, Beyond Belief, 2003
  • C.A. Forbes, 1936. "Books for the burning", in Transactions of the American Philological Association 67 pp. 114–125. A classic account written at the time of the Nazi book-burning rallies.bg:Изгаряне на книги

de:Bücherverbrennung es:Quema de libros ko:금서 he:שרפת ספרים nl:Boekverbranding ja:焚書 pt:Bücherverbrennung sv:Bokbål