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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!rutgers!news.cs.indiana.edu!bsu-cs!joemays
- From: joemays@bsu-cs.bsu.edu (Joseph F. Mays)
- Newsgroups: alt.censorship
- Subject: Story on Censorship
- Message-ID: <3142@bsu-cs.bsu.edu>
- Date: 18 Nov 92 19:33:22 GMT
- Distribution: alt.censorship
- Organization: Dept. of CS Ball State University Muncie IN
- Lines: 242
-
- Gordon Fitch posted the following on soc.feminism. It seemed relevant
- to this group too, so I am reposting a copy here...
- -------------------------------------------------
- Subject: NY Times Reports Furor at University of Michigan
- Date: 18 Nov 92 18:11:13 GMT
- Organization: mydog in exile
- Lines: 240
- Nntp-Posting-Host: alexandre-dumas.ics.uci.edu
-
- Most of this article is an extract from an article
- which appeared in _The_New_York_Times_ on Friday,
- Nov. 13, 1992. I have shortened the article some-
- what and have removed the typos, so the remaining
- typos are mine. Some notes:
-
- 1. It seemed to me that the article had been cut in a
- peculiar way. Important information may be missing. I
- notice, for example, curious disjunctions, like that
- between the reason given by one of the students for the
- action which sparked the dispute, the reason the artist
- whose work was removed reports, and some of the other
- rationales given by interested parties.
-
- 2. I found the paranoid quality of the anti-
- prostitution speakers odd. They said they feared the
- tape in question would inspire attacks, but not how and
- from whom. MacKinnon said that the dispute was an
- "attempt to smear." The anti-prostitution people
- accepted only if there were no people from the other
- side -- an admission of considerable weakness on the
- face of it.
-
- 3. I noticed an ironic resemblance between MacKinnon's
- unitary view of feminism -- she must deny that her
- feminist opponents are feminists -- and those who
- attack feminism using MacKinnon. They form, it would
- appear, a mutually supportive ideological structure.
-
- 4. It is interesting that I first heard about this in
- the New York Times, rather than through some other
- channels, including Usenet. It seems like a fairly
- important and interesting event from the _Times_
- account, yet I have seen no mention of it elsewhere.
- Maybe the _Times_ is playing it up? Is anyone from
- the University of Michigan out there?
-
- =====================================================
-
- Furor on Exhibit at Law School Splits Feminists
-
- by Tamar Lewin
-
- The closing of an art exhibit on prostitution two weeks
- ago has plunged the University of Michigan Law school
- into an angry debate about free speech, feminism,
- pornography, and censorship.
-
- Legally the issue is whether students at the school
- viiolated the First Amendment guarantee of free specch
- by removing from the exhibit a two-hour videotape
- featuring works about prostitution by five artists,
- including two former prostitutes.
-
- But politically, the fracas is the latest and most
- virulent outbreak of tensions between two camps of
- feminists: those who seek to suppress pornography and
- prostitution, arguing that they incite sexual violence
- and violate women's civil rights, and those who say the
- anti-pornography, anti-prostitution movement is a form
- of censorship that limits women's sexuality and
- free-speech rights.
-
- Feuding Feminist Lawyers
-
- It is no accident that the furor occurred at the
- University of Michigan, whose law faculty includes
- Catharine MacKinnon, a leader in the fight against
- pornography and one of the moving forces behind a
- newly organized student publication, The Michigan
- Journal of Gender & Law, which sponsored the art
- exhibit as part of a three-day conference on
- prostitution.
-
- Ms. MacKinnon has long been at odds with other feminist
- lawyers over her support of legislation that would
- allow women who could show that they had been harmed by
- pornography to sue the manufacturers and distributors
- of the material and to stop it from being distributed.
-
- Carol Jacobsen, the Detroit artist who put together the
- art exhibit at the request of the hournal staff, has
- been an outspoken ciritc of Ms. MacKinnon's
- anti-pornography efforts, and she supports abolishing
- laws against prostitution. Her exhibit, part of which
- opened more than a week before the conference, included
- her own video inteviews with Detroit prostitutes, who
- are referred to as "sex workers" by conference
- organizers.
-
- When the conference began, she also installed a
- two-hour videotape featuring five works, including one
- by Veronica Vera, a former prostitute. Ms. Vera's work
- included footage from sex films and a brief clip of her
- testifying against an anti-pornography measure before a
- [sic] United States Senate.
-
- "Trafficking Women"
-
- The next morning, that videotape was removed by a group
- of law students from the journal staff who said they
- were acting in reponse of complaints by two of the
- speakers, Evelina Giobbe, the director of an
- anti-prostitution group in St. Paul, and John
- Stoltenberg, a New York writer. [ I note that the
- _Times_ article omits the relationship of these parties
- with the tape -- whether they had viewed it, heard
- about it, or whatever. - gcf ]
-
- "We really didn't think of it as a censorship issue,
- but as a safety issue, because two of our speakers said
- that based on their experience at other events, the
- tape would be a threat to their safety," said Bryan
- Wells, one of the students. "It wasn't our place to
- assess that threat. It was out position to trust our
- speakers. Seven of us from the journal made the
- decision to remove the tape, and while I regreat that
- it made people unhappy, I don't regret the decision."
-
- Ms. MacKinnon, who stressed that she was not involved
- in the decision to pull to video, said that she
- supported the students' action.
-
- "It is one thing to talk about trafficking women, and
- it is another thing to traffic woemn," she said.
- "There is nothing in [the] First Amendment to require
- that this school, or students in it, be forced to
- traffic women. If these materials are pornography --
- and I haven't seen them so I can't say -- it is not a
- question of their offensiveness, but of safety and
- equality for women. Showing pornography sets women up
- for harassment and rape."
-
- Ms. Jacobsen said that when she arrived at the gallery
- on the morning of [the] second day of the conference
- and discovered the tape was missing, she assumed it had
- been stolen and installed a second copy. On the way
- back to the conference, she ran into some of the
- students involved and became infuriated when she found
- out what had happened.
-
- "I told them they couldn't just pick out a selected
- artwork and remove it from the exhibit, but they didn't
- seem to get it," Ms. Jacobsen said in a telephone
- interview. "They said it wasn't censorship, they were
- just trying to protect people from getting their
- feelings upset. I said if they wished to censor any
- part they would have to censor the whole thing. They
- came back and said, 'Take it down.' And that's what
- happened."
-
- Issue is Now Free Speech
-
- The law students involved said they had decided quickly
- and informally to pull the tpae. They said that in
- doing so they did not consider either the free-speech
- implications or alternatives such as seeking increased
- security.
-
- "Everybody's raising the free-speech question now, and
- the analogy of the Nazis marching through a Jewish
- suburb like Skokie," said Laura Berger, one of the
- students. "But one thing that bothers me is that while
- everyone understands that Jews are scared of Nazis, no
- one seems to understand that sex workers might have
- real reasons to be afraid of pornogrpahy. That was
- what the symposium was all about."
-
- Since the symposium, the issue of prositution has taken
- a back seat to First Amendment discussion, both in the
- pages of The Michigan Daily, the student newspaper, and
- among ... feminist civil libertarians. Many of the
- latter were already organized to lobby against the
- Federal anti-pornography legislation Ms. MacKinnon
- supported.
-
- Ms. MacKinnon sees the furor as an attempt to smear her
- and another speaker at the conference, Andrea Dworkin,
- a New York writer who has been her ally in years of
- efforts against pornography.
-
- "My real view, so far as this pertains to me, is that
- this is a witchhunt by First Amendment fundamentalists
- who are persecuting and blacklisting dissidents like
- Andrea Dworkin and myself as arts censors," said Ms.
- MacKinnon. "I don't see it as a fight within feminism
- but a fight between those who wish to end male
- supremacy and those who wish to do better under it."
-
- Civil libertarians say the events at the Ann Arbor
- campus illustrate the extremism of Ms. MacKinnon's
- views, and how easily they can be used to censor
- women's free expression.
-
- "It's hard to articulate how damaging the femino-
- censors can be, but this is a perfect example of how
- the MacKinnon crusade hurts women," said Marjorie
- Heins, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's
- National Arts Censorship Project. "Censorship of
- sexually explicit material is not in women's interest.
- It's also unconstitutional. Michigan is a state
- school, and when any government institution removes an
- art exhibit or book because it expresses ideas some
- people find offensive, there's a First Amendment
- problem."
-
- Lee Bollinger, the dean of the law school ... said,
- "[Apart from the constitutional issue] there's the
- academic question of whether it's reasonable to put on
- a one-sided conference." Several of the students who
- organized the conference said it had been impossible to
- get both viewpoints.
-
- "We had a problem as soon as we invited speakers,
- because some of the key anti-prostitution people
- accepted on the condition that they wouldn't speak if
- there were people from the other side there," said Lisa
- Lodin, one of the students who organized the
- conference. "We agonized about it, because we felt we
- were being manipulated, but we went ahead anyway. Part
- of the reason we wanted Carol Jacobsen's exhibit so
- much was to show the other side, without
- confrontation."
-
- Ms. Lodin and several other students said they were so
- discouraged by the turn of events that they have begun
- to reexamine their attitudes toward feminism. ...
-
- --
- --
-
- )*( Gordon Fitch )*( gcf@panix.com )*(
- ( 1238 Blg. Grn. Sta., NY NY 10274 * 718.273.5556 )
-