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Socialist Review Index (1993–1996) | Socialist Review 176 Contents
Socialist Review, June 1994
Briefing
Censorship
Not on front of the children
From Socialist Review, No. 176, June 1994.
Copyright © Socialist Review.
Copied with thanks from the Socialist Review Archive.
Marked up by Einde O’Callaghan for ETOL.
- David Alton, the anti-abortionist Liberal Democrat MP,
attempted draconian new measures of censorship for videos in an
amendment to the Criminal Justice Bill. He was backed up by an
apparently dramatic turnaround by a number of leading psychologists.
They published a paper only days before the debate in parliament,
supporting the view that television and video violence does make
kids more violent.
- Alton’s new video classification of ‘unsuitable for
home consumption’ would have banned the rental of films such as
Schindler’s List to anyone of any age. The compromise
reached to prevent a government defeat was suggested by Labour’s
shadow home secretary, Tony Blair, and will make the British Board
of Film Classification the most powerful movie censors in Western Europe.
- The paper used to support Alton included no new research.
The vast majority of studies have concluded that there is no
evidence to link screen violence with young offenders’ behaviour.
Jamie Bulger’s murderers had almost certainly never seen Child’s
Play III despite the widespread assumption that it led them to kill.
- Films such as Reservoir Dogs and Bad Lieutenant,
passed uncut for video viewing before the Bulger case, have now been
stopped. The Exorcist has never been passed for video release.
- The government regularly intervenes to censor television
coverage. Leon Brittan, then home secretary, banned the broadcast of
an episode of the BBC’s Real Lives series in 1985 because
it showed Sinn Fein member Martin McGuinness in a sympathetic light.
The National Union of Journalists called a 24-hour stoppage in
protest. No national news was broadcast in Britain on the day and
the BBC World Service played music all day.
- Duncan Campbell’s episode in the Secret Society
series was banned. The government claimed his exposure of a secret
spy satellite, Zircon, broke the Official Secrets Act and put
lives at risk. Campbell’s home and the BBC’s Glasgow
headquarters were raided by police and the BBC’s assistant
director general was briefly jailed for not cooperating with the
search. Zircon was eventually shown but Cabinet in the
same series remains untransmitted – it looked at the abuse of
secret cabinet committees by Margaret Thatcher.
- During the Gulf War television pictures of soldiers in
‘agony or severe shock’ or ‘imagery of patients suffering from
severe disfigurements’ were banned. Reports of fighter bomber
pilots watching pornographic videos to relax before missions were
also censored. No journalist was allowed to speak to soldiers
without a senior army escort.
- A Panorama episode on the sale of arms to Iraq was
one of many programmes censored during the war. These included:
Monty Python’s Flying Circus (showing Graham Chapman as a
British Major in a ballet dress), ’Allo ’Allo, Carry on up
the Kbyber, the Carling Black Label ‘Dambusters’ ad and the
Marmite ‘soldiers’ ad. Channel 4 cancelled a Vietnamese film season.
- Around 67 records were taken off all BBC play lists
including Lulu’s Boom Bang a Bang, John Lennon’s Imagine
and Give Peace a Chance, Two Tribes by Frankie Goes to Hollywood, Desmond Decker’s
The Israelites and Heaven Help Us All by Stevie Wonder.
- Anti-war activity was also censored. The Observer
newspaper had to print an apology for including a photo of an
anti-war demo with Socialist Worker placards blacked out. In America a media
monitoring group reported that less than 1 percent of airtime was
given to organised popular opposition to Bush’s Gulf policy.
- In 1977, the year of the queen’s Silver Jubilee, the Sex
Pistols reached number two (it was widely accepted they were kept
out of the top slot) in the charts with their God Save the Queen
(and her fascist regime!) despite being banned from the radio and
television after swearing on the Bill Grundy show.
- The Independent Broadcasting Authority banned the Pogues’
song Streets of Sorrow/Birmingham Six from all commercial
radio because, ‘The song alleges some convicted terrorists are not
guilty and goes on to suggest that Irish people are at a
disadvantage in the British Courts.’
- Rap records have regularly suffered at the hands of the
censors. A Paris album was banned in the US. The offending track,
Bush Killa, described revenge on a racist president. Rap
albums are now often sold under the counter or with ‘Parental
Warning’ stickers added.
- The broadcasting of any words spoken by anyone from a
proscribed list of organisations including the IRA and Sinn Fein was
made illegal in 1988. Archive material was covered so there was no
exception even for those now dead. A documentary on Irish Civil War
leader Michael Collins was banned, has never been shown and even
Kenneth Griffith, the maker, does not have access to it.
- When a planned Thames Television programme on Amnesty
reports of police torture in Northern Ireland was banned, the local
union blacked the substitute programme and the television screen
remained blank.
- After the Harrods bombing a Comedy Classics piece
featuring Norman Wisdom in 1961 singing When Irish Eyes are
Smiling was cut, as was a scene showing a tourist asking the way
to Harrods. Ken Loach’s award winning film Hidden Agenda,
exposing British undercover operations in Northern Ireland, was
pulled because of the Warrington bombing the day before.
- The introduction of Clause 28 in 1988 banned local
authorities from publishing or teaching anything which might
‘promote homosexuality’ or its acceptability as a ‘pretended
family relationship’. Jenny Lives with Eric and Martin, a children’s book
about gays, was taken from library shelves.
- Lady Chatterley’s Lover, a novel by D.H. Lawrence,
was one of the most celebrated cases of censorship. But when a court
wanted to ban the publication of a cheap 3/6d edition, the case lost
and the book became the biggest selling novel ever in Britain.
- Explicit ‘safe sex’ information for gays and sex
education pamphlets for teenagers have been victims of the
government censor. An erect penis has yet to be passed for screen
viewing. Gay sex is rarely portrayed in mainstream cinema.
- Britain is one of the few Western countries still with a
blasphemy law. It was used for the first time for 100 years by Mary
Whitehouse in 1977 against Gay News for its portrayal of a ‘well hung’ Christ
on the cross with an accompanying poem.
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