“Moral Bonfires”: An Exploration of Book Burning in American Society

Authors

  • Lisa Olson School of Information Management, Faculty of Management, Dalhousie University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5931/djim.v16i1.10886

Keywords:

America, Book Burning, Censorship, Freedom of Speech, United States

Abstract

This article seeks to offer an introduction to book burning in American society. Firstly, it considers the use of fire as a method of destruction and its relation to freedom of speech and the American judicial system. It then seeks to unearth the reasons for book burning through an examination of a number of instances throughout American history. The phenomenon of book burning has been occurring worldwide for thousands of years, and as a longstanding tradition that has always drawn visceral reactions from spectators, it is still happening with alarming frequency. In America, book burning walks the fine line between censorship and free speech. It remains, however, an attack on knowledge and culture and is consequently a threat to the information management field. This paper, therefore, seeks to explore these occurrences from recent American history and discover why Americans have been, and are still burning books, in an attempt to better understand these attacks.

Author Biography

Lisa Olson, School of Information Management, Faculty of Management, Dalhousie University

Lisa Olson is a first year Master of Information student at Dalhousie University. A former History major at Thompson Rivers University, she has a special interest in exploring information science through a historical lens. Her primary area of research is information in society, and she passionately explores the concept of censorship and its manifestations through book burning and social media. Lisa completed this paper for the class INFO 5500: Information in Society at Dalhousie University, which piqued her interest to further study the role of book burning throughout history and into the present day.

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Published

2022-04-29

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Articles