| censorship |
The act of hiding, removing, altering or destroying copies of art or writing so that general public access to it is partially or completely limited. Contrast with bowdlerization. Click here to download a PDF handout discussing censorship in great detail. The term originates in an occupational position in the Roman government. After the fifth century BCE, Rome commissioned "censors. ...
Ãâó: web.cn.edu/kwheeler/lit_terms_C.html
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| censorship |
broadly, any government restrictions on speech or writing; more precisely, government restrictions on forms of expression before they are disseminated
Ãâó: www.imuna.org/c2c/app_a.html
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| censorship |
Action taken to prevent others from having access to a book or information; a public objection to words, subjects and/or information in books, films, and other media with the idea of depriving others from reading or viewing them.
Ãâó: www.odl.state.ok.us/servlibs/l-files/glossc.htm
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| censorship |
A film for theatrical release is reviewed by a film classification board which may request certain changes before release will be allowed, or allowed under a certain age rating.
Ãâó: www.soyouwannasellascript.com/source/glossary.cfm
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| censorship |
the means of keeping unpleasant (or unsociable) desires out of consciousness. Censorship is circumvented through dreams, parapraxes (or "slips of the tongue"), word association, and figures of speech.
Ãâó: www.geneseo.edu/~easton/humanities/Freud.htm
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