Nov 21, 2019
The 18th century ended with free speech in full retreat. With
the French Revolution, the call for “Enlightenment Now!” was no
longer seen as the harbinger of humanity’s inevitable march toward
progress. It had become synonymous with radical forces of
destruction drowning monarchy, tradition, and religion in the blood
of kings, aristocrats, and nuns.
With the defeat of Napoleon in 1814, conservatives and monarchs
were firmly back in power — and they had no intention of letting
go. Never again were those rulers who put down wild-eyed
revolutionaries like mad dogs going to allow radicals to seduce the
people with lofty principles and propaganda.
In order to rebuild a stabile Europe with respect for authority
and tradition, freedom of speech had to be reined in. Even in
supposedly liberal Britain, William Pitt’s anti-revolutionary
“reign of terror” of the 1790s was revived and intensified in the
1810s and 20s. In this episode, we see how European rulers weaved
an intricate web of censorship and repression across the continent.
We will see:
- How the Congress of Vienna entrenched an authoritarian and
traditionalist political order in Europe after the battle of
Waterloo
- How the Carlsbad Decrees centralized preventive censorship and
limited academic freedom across the German Confederation
- How German writers like Heinrich Heine and Karl Marx fought an
uphill battle against censorship and repression
- How European censorship was driven by a fear of the
increasingly literate masses
- How the British government used the crimes of seditious and
blasphemous libel to harass and intimidate political radicals and
reformers
- How the Peterloo Massacre of workers in Manchester radicalized
opposition to the Tory government and intensified the calls for
reform
- How the radical publisher Richard Carlile spent 10 years in
prison for selling deist and republican publications, including Tom
Paine’s “Age of Reason”
- How Carlile and his workers ultimately defeated the government
with a constant stream of “seditious” and “blasphemous”
publications, despite being imprisoned and harassed
- How James and John Stuart Mill contributed to expanding the
British tolerance of controversial religious and political ideas as
the 19th century progressed
- How the French Revolutions of 1830 and 1848 led to brief
periods of liberal euphoria and the collapse of censorship across
Europe, only to be crushed by counter-revolutionary forces
- How the Iron Chancellor Otto Von Bismarck used a national
emergency to crush socialist and social democratic newspapers and
publications in the second half of the 19th century
- How the idea of press freedom and the mechanization of the
printing press made pre-publication censorship impossible for most
governments
- How press freedom regained its momentum at the end of the 19th
century
Why have kings, emperors, and governments killed and imprisoned
people to shut them up? And why have countless people risked death
and imprisonment to express their beliefs? Jacob Mchangama guides
you through the history of free speech from the trial of Socrates
to the Great Firewall.
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