Oxford marks Hebdo attack with Voltaire

Blackleaf

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Academics at Oxford University are using Voltaire and other historical defenders of free speech to mark the first anniversary of the Charlie Hebdo attack in Paris.

Lecturers and students have translated essays about free speech and are publishing them as a free e-book.

Caroline Warman, associate professor in French, says she wants the texts to be used in debates about freedom.

She says marchers after the attacks in Paris carried quotes by Voltaire.

Dr Warman has headed a group of more than 100 students and staff at Oxford who have translated quotes and essays by French and other European writers.

Of course, as we all know, modern Oxford University and other British Universities are such a believer and defender of free speech that their pampered, right-on, left-wing students bar anyone from making speeches or holding opinions that aren't considered PC, and that includes barring Iranian women who have fled to Britain from making speeches denouncing Islamism in case Muslims find them "offensive".

Oxford marks Hebdo attack with Voltaire


By Sean Coughlan, Education correspondent
BBC News
7 January 2016


Oxford academics are marking the Charlie Hebdo attack with essays defending free speech

Academics at Oxford University are using Voltaire and other historical defenders of free speech to mark the first anniversary of the Charlie Hebdo attack in Paris.

Lecturers and students have translated essays about free speech and are publishing them as a free e-book.

Caroline Warman, associate professor in French, says she wants the texts to be used in debates about freedom.

She says marchers after the attacks in Paris carried quotes by Voltaire.

Dr Warman has headed a group of more than 100 students and staff at Oxford who have translated quotes and essays by French and other European writers.


Voltaire's defence of free speech was quoted in the wake of the Charlie Hebdo attacks

It is an intellectual response challenging the ideas behind the "intolerable" attack at the office of the satirical magazine last year, which killed 12 people.

As a riposte to last year's attack by Islamist extremists, French academics produced a collection of essays called Tolerance.

The Oxford academics have produced their own version in English, drawing on 18th Century writers and philosophers.


Dr Warman is challenging the "intolerable" attack, with enlightenment ideas

Dr Warman, from Jesus College, Oxford, says Voltaire's "pithy slogans about free speech and religious tolerance" were used after the attacks as a way for people to "reiterate their values and express their grief".

"His face appeared on posters and banners in marches and vigils throughout France."

Dr Warman says that 18th Century authors, writing about persecution, the boundaries of liberty and freedom of expression, have great resonance in the modern era.


Tributes in Paris marking the anniversary of last year's attack

As well as Voltaire, the collection includes pieces by Diderot, Montesquieu and Rousseau, on topics such as slavery, religious intolerance and the rights of individuals, in essays including Free thinking, Universal Tolerance and the satirical On the horrible danger of reading.

It also includes Italian writer Cesare Beccaria, who said: "Freedom disappears the instant laws make it possible in certain circumstances for man to stop being a person and become a thing."

Dr Warman wants such writers to be brought to a wider public and to use them to debate issues raised by the Charlie Hebdo attacks, such as "What are the limits of free speech? Why is tolerance important? Why is respect for others important? Why is exploitation unacceptable?"

She says these texts can provide a better appreciation of "our European heritage... which can help us understand the problems the world faces today".


Oxford marks Hebdo attack with Voltaire - BBC News
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Interesting that they left out some of the most eloquent and influential writers on freedom: Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, Benjamin Franklin, James Madison, &c.
 

Blackleaf

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Interesting that they left out some of the most eloquent and influential writers on freedom: Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, Benjamin Franklin, James Madison, &c.

Slave owners, like many of America's "freedom-loving" founding fathers.
 

Blackleaf

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Benjamin Franklin owned slaves? News to me.

Mr Franklin owned two slaves called George and King who worked as personal servants, and his newspaper, the Pennsylvania Gazette, commonly ran notices involving the sale or purchase of slaves and contracts for indentured labourers.

Most Americans don't seem to realise that most of their "freedom-loving" founding fathers were, in fact, slave owners.