overview
blasphemy
sacrilege
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studies
This page considers writing about blasphemy legislation, cases
and issues.
It covers -
introductions
For broad historical overviews see Alain Cabantous' Blasphemy:
Impious Speech in the West from the Seventeenth to the Nineteenth
Century (New York: Columbia Uni Press 2002), the dated
but still useful A History of the Crime of Blasphemy
(London: Sweet & Maxwell 1928) by George Nokes, David
Lawton's Blasphemy (Hemel Hempstead: Harvester 1993),
Blasphemy: Verbal Offence against the Sacred, from Moses
to Salman Rushdie (New York: Knopf 1993) by Leonard Levy
and Governing Morals: A Social History of Moral Regulation
(Cambridge: Cambridge Uni Press 1999) by Alan Hunt. Marci
Hamilton's God vs the Gavel: Religion & the Rule of
Law (Cambridge: Cambridge Uni Press 2004) offers a sprightly
defence of separation of church and state; Daniel Dennett's
Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon
(London: Viking 2006) makes a plea for moderation. A coffee-table
view of blasphemy in the visual arts is provided by Blasphemy:
Art that Offends (London: Black Dog 2006) by S. Brent
Plate.
The literature on religious heterodoxy is extensive. Salient
works on the conceptualisation of blasphemy and responses
by the secular and clerical arms of the pre-industrial state
include Lucien Febvre's The Problem of Unbelief in the
Sixteenth Century: The Religion of Rabelais (Cambridge:
Harvard Uni Press 1985), Brendon Dooley's The Social History
of Skepticism: Experience & Doubt in Early-Modern Culture
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Uni Press 1999), Commanding
Right & Forbidding Wrong in Islamic Thought (Cambridge:
Cambridge Uni Press 2001) by Michael Cook, Abdullah &
Hassan Saeed's Freedom of Religion, Apostasy & Islam
(Aldershot: Ashgate 2004) and Wael Hallaq's Authority,
Continuity and Change in Islamic Law (Cambridge: Cambridge
Uni Press 2001).
secularisation
The secularisation of industrial societies over the past two
hundred years is explored in works such as Hugh McLeod's Secularisation
in Western Europe 1848-1914 (Basingstoke: Macmillan 2000),
Owen Chadwick's Secularisation of the European Mind in
the 19th Century (London: Cambridge Uni Press 1975),
Peter Berger's The Desecularization of the World
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans 1999), The Secularization Debate
(Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield 2000) by William Swatos
& Daniel Olson, Walter Arnstein's The Bradlaugh Case,
A Study in Late Victorian Opinion & Politics (Oxford:
Oxford Uni Press 1963) and readings in Religion &
Modernization: Sociologists and Historians Debate the Secularization
Thesis (Oxford: Clarendon Press 1992) edited by Steve
Bruce.
Susan Jacoby's Freethinkers: A History of American Secularism
(New York: Metropolitan 2004) attempts to show that freethought
is as american as apple pie. Mark McGarvie's One Nation
Under Law: America's Early National Struggles to Separate
Church and State (DeKalb: Uni of Northern Illinois Press
2004) offers insights about the early US. David Berman's A
History of Atheism in Britain (London: Routledge 1990)
offers a perspective on the UK.
For Australia see in particular Gary Bouma's Religion:
Meaning, Transcendence & Community in Australia (Melbourne:
Longman 1992), Hillary Carey's Believing in Australia:
A Cultural History of Religions (St Leonard's: Allen
& Unwin 1996), Edmund Campion's Australian Catholics
(Ringwood: Viking 1987), HR Jackson's Churches and People
in Australia and New Zealand, 1860-1930 (Wellington:
Allen & Unwin 1987) and God and Government: The New
Zealand Experience (Dunedin: Uni of Otago Press 2004)
edited by John Stenhouse & Rex Ahdar.
print and performance
Joss Marsh's Word Crimes: Blasphemy, Culture & Literature
in 19th Century England (Chicago: Uni of Chicago Press
1998) and an academic study of UK blasphemy censorship, complemented
by David Nash's incisive Blasphemy in Modern Britain:
1789 to the Present (Aldershot: Ashgate 1999), Kevin
Gilmartin's Print Politics: The Press & Radical Opposition
in Early Nineteenth-Century England (Cambridge: Cambridge
Uni Press 1996) and Arthur Calder-Marshall's thinner Lewd,
Blasphemous & Obscene (London: Hutchinson 1972).
For restrictions on performance in the UK - including contortions
over sacred drama - see Alan Nielsen's The Great Victorian
Sacrilege: Preachers, Politics and ''the Passion'' 1879-1884
(Jefferson: McFarland 1991). For debate about blasphemy in
the cinema see resources highlighted in the Censorship &
Free Speech guide elsewhere
on this site and works such as Ina Bertrand's Film Censorship
in Australia (St Lucia: Uni of Qld Press 1978), Frank
Walsh's Sin & Censorship (New Haven: Yale Uni
Press 1996), Gregory Black's The Catholic Crusade Against
The Movies 1940-75 (Cambridge: Cambridge Uni Press 1997)
and Anton Kozlovic's 2003 paper
Religious Film Fears 1: Satanic Infusion, Graven Images
and Iconographic Perversion.
The dour Beyond a Joke: The limits of humour (London:
Palgrave 2005) edited by Sharon Lockyer & Michael Pickering
considers the ethics of comedy.
prosecutions
Individual prosecutions have attracted scholarly attention
in varying detail.
The 1729 Woolston case is discussed in Hogarth's Harlot:
Sacred Parody in Enlightenment England (Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins Uni Press 2003) by Ronald Paulson, for us more ingenious
than wholly convincing. For Hone see The Laughter of Triumph:
William Hone and the Fight for the Free Press (London:
Faber 2005) by Ben Wilson
The Kneeland case is covered in the 1997 paper
by Charles May & Richard Nelson on The 'Hoary-Headed
Apostle of Satan' and Press Freedom in America: The Seditious
Blasphemy Libel & Censorship Trials of Freethought Journalist
Abner Kneeland and in Blasphemy in Massachusetts:
Freedom of Conscience and the Abner Kneeland Case - a Documentary
Record (New York: Da Capo 1973) compiled by Leonard Levy.
For the Maoriland Worker see Geoffrey Troughton's
2006 'The Maoriland Worker and Blasphemy in New Zealand' in
91 Labour History.
For recent UK cases see Richard Webster's A Brief History
Of Blasphemy: Liberalism, Censorship and 'The Satanic Verses'
(Southwold: Orwell Press 1990) and Nicholas Walter's Blasphemy,
Ancient and Modern (London: Rationalist Press Association
1990). The 'Gay News' case is discussed in Geoffrey Robertson's
The Justice Game (London: Chatto & Windus 1998).
The Satanic Verses inspired a large number of works,
including Lisa Appignanesi's The Rushdie File (Syracuse:
Syracuse Uni Press 1990), Jeff Archer's Publish and be
damned: the Literary politics of 'The Satanic Verses'
(University Park: Pennsylvania State Uni Press 1990), Daniel
Pipes' The Rushdie affair: the novel, the Ayatollah and
the West (New York: Carol 1990), Malise Ruthven's
A Satanic Affair: Salman Rushdie and the Rage of Islam
(London: Hogarth Press 1991), Shabbir Akhtar's Be Careful
With Muhammad! The Salman Rushdie Affair (London: Bellew
1989) and The Salman Rushdie controversy in interreligious
perspective (Lewiston: Edward Mellen 1990) edited by
Dan Cohen-Sherbok.
RS Ross is featured in Volume 11 of the Australian Dictionary
of Biography (Carlton: Melbourne University Press 1988).
For the dynamics of prosecution see works such as William
Bainbridge's The Sociology of Religious Movements
(New York: Routledge 1997), Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi's The
Psychology of Religious Behavior, Belief and Experience
(New York: Routledge 1997), Jose Casanova's Public Religions
in the Modern World (Chicago: Uni of Chicago Press 1994)
and The Private Roots of Public Action (Cambridge:
Harvard Uni Press 2001) by Nancy Burns, Kay Schlozman &
Sidney Verba.
Accounts by figures such as Whitehouse, Nile, Pell and Comstock
are - alas - problematical.
For the pre-industrial period perspectives are provided by
James Johnson's crisp Deceit and Sincerity in Early-Modern
Venice (PDF)
on the Esecutori contro la Bestemmia, Henry Kamen's The
Spanish Inquisition: A Historical Revision (New Haven:
Yale Uni Press 1998), Before the Bawdy Court: Selections
from Church Court and Other Records Relating to the Correction
of Moral Offences In England, Scotland and New England, 1300-1800
(London: Elek 1972) edited by Paul Hair and the online Proceedings
of the Old Bailey.
culture wars and law reform
A US perspective is provided in Levy, in Sex, Sin &
Blasphemy: A Guide to America's Censorship Wars (New
York: New Press 1993) by Marjorie Heins and in Masters
of Illusion: The Supreme Court and the Religion Clauses
(New York: New York Uni Press 2007) by Frank Ravitch. German
law and practice is discussed here.
For Eire see Neville Cox's Blasphemy & the Law in
Ireland (Lewiston: Edward Mellen 2000).
The 1994 New South Wales Law Reform Commission Blasphemy
report
and 1998 federal Article 18: report of the inquiry into
freedom of religion and belief report (PDF)
in Australia cover local developments. It might be supplemented
by David Marr's The High Price Of Heaven (St Leonards:
Allen & Unwin 1999), Peter Coleman's Obscenity, Blasphemy
& Sedition: The Rise & Fall of Literary Censorship
in Australia (Potts Point: Duffy & Snellgrove 2000)
and other works highlighted here.
For a view from the postmodern academy see the 1999 article
Finis Africae - of blasphemers, infidels, false prophets
and artistic diuresis.
profane speech
For blasphemy as 'bad language' see Language Most Foul
(North Sydney: Allen & Unwin 2004) by Ruth Wajnryb, Swearing:
A Social History of Foul Language, Oaths & Profanity in
English (Harmondsworth: Penguin 1998) by Geoffrey Hughes,
Learning to Curse: Essays in Early Modern Culture
(New York: Routledge 1992) by Stephen Greenblatt, Maureen
Flynn's 1995 paper
and The Social History of Language (Cambridge: Cambridge
Uni Press 1987) edited by Peter Burke & Roy Porter.
A Season with Verona (London: Secker & Warburg 2002)
by Tim Parks offers a perspective on contemporary bad language
and transgression.
tolerance
Broader questions of tolerance and dissent are explored in
From Persecution to Tolerance: The Glorious Revolution
and Religion in England (Oxford: Oxford Uni Press 1991)
edited by Ole Grell & Nicholas Tycke, Tolerance &
Intolerance in the European Reformation (Cambridge: Cambridge
Uni Press 1996) edited by Grell & Bob Scribner and Toleration
in Enlightenment Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge Uni Press
2000) edited by Grell & Roy Porter and How the Idea
of Religious Toleration Came to the West (Princeton:
Princeton Uni Press 2003) by Perez Zagorin.
Richard Ely's Unto God and Caesar: Religious Issues in
the Emerging Commonwealth, 1891-1906 (Carlton: Melbourne
Uni Press 1976) provides an Australian perspective. For the
Van Gogh incident see Albert Benschop's 2005 Chronicle
of a Political Murder Foretold: Jihad in the Netherlands
paper,
Ian Buruma's Murder in Amsterdam: The Death of Theo Van
Gogh and the Limits of Tolerance (London: Penguin 2006)
and The Assassination of Theo van Gogh: From Social Drama
to Cultural Trauma (Durham: Duke Uni Press 2008) by Ron
Eyerman.
In addition to works on Islamic law and practice noted above
see Joseph Schacht's An Introduction to Islamic Law
(Oxford: Clarendon Press 1964), Islamic Law & Jurisprudence
(Seattle: Uni of Washington Press 1990) edited by Nicholas
Heer and the provocative The End of Faith: Religion, Terror
and the Future of Reason (New York: Free Press 2004)
by Sam Harris.
elsewhere
More detailed pointers to literature on hate speech and free
speech are provided in the
guide on Censorship &
Free Speech; exploration of religious/ethnic discrimination
and the discussion of hate speech
in the digital environment elsewhere on this site.
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