【Desperate Housewives XXX Porn Parody】
Real Talk
Video & Multimedia
INTERVIEWER
Was the community you grew up in pleased about your career?
MUNRO
It was known there had been stories published here and there, but my writing wasn’t fancy. It didn’t go over well in my hometown. The sex, the bad language, the incomprehensibility … The local newspaper printed an editorial about me: A soured introspective view of life … And, A warped personality projected on …
—The Art of Fiction No. 137, 1994
Happy birthday to Alice Munro. In this 1979 clip from Take 30, a Canadian talk show, Munro—who’s eighty-two today—discusses the less-than-warm reception her collection Lives of Girls and Women received in her native Huron County, where a conservative group argued that it should be expunged from twelfth-grade syllabi. She speaks here to Harry Brown (whose three-piece suit yours truly wouldn’t mind owning) about fighting the proposed ban.
This is the kind of talk show that’s all but extinct today, in which two unadorned, ordinary-looking people have an intelligent conversation without a studio audience, or a ticker scrolling beneath them, or a host of other distracting stimuli that have come to seem normal. But what’s more eye-opening is how little has changed since then. The controversies stalking literature in 1979 are almost identical to today’s bugbears: declining readership, increasing moral turpitude. A debate, in other words, about what literature should do and who it’s for.
“Many people don’t read much and don’t think books are very important anyway,” Munro tells the interviewer. And:
As far as I can tell from the talk of the people who are against the books, they somehow think that if we don’t write about sex, it will disappear, it will go away. They talk about preservingtheir seventeen-year-old and eighteen-year-old children, protecting them. Well, biology doesn’t protect them. They don’t need to read books.
It’s not clear whether Munro succeeded in stopping or overturning the ban, but apparently the events in Huron County “inspired the Book and Periodical Council of Canada to launch Freedom to Read Week, an annual celebration of freedom of expression.”
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Google releases plan to protect you from AI threats
2025-06-27 03:48Google releases plan to protect you from AI threats
2025-06-27 03:21Popular Posts
GPU Availability and Pricing Update: April 2022
2025-06-27 04:56Water and Wonder by John Lingan
2025-06-27 04:28Papa's Cats, and Other News by Sadie Stein
2025-06-27 03:5710 Halloween costumes you really shouldn't wear this year
2025-06-27 03:35Touring Logitech's Audio HQ
2025-06-27 03:26Featured Posts
Sinner vs. de Minaur 2025 livestream: Watch Australian Open for free
2025-06-27 05:36YouTube views for guided meditation videos spike during pandemic
2025-06-27 05:32Oral Sadism and the Vegetarian Personality by Sadie Stein
2025-06-27 04:17Educational Viewing by Sadie Stein
2025-06-27 03:50Best free ChatGPT courses
2025-06-27 03:09Popular Articles
Best Dyson deal: Save over $100 on Dyson V11 Origin cordless vacuum
2025-06-27 05:42Obama sank a perfect three
2025-06-27 04:39A Man Pronounces the Longest Word in the World by Sadie Stein
2025-06-27 04:18Mike McCormack, Galway City, Ireland by Matteo Pericoli
2025-06-27 04:14Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (1933)
Wisdom Convergence Information Network
The Portable Workstation: Dell XPS 13 + 32 UltraSharp 4K Monitor
2025-06-27 05:00Visionary Information Network
Obama sank a perfect three
2025-06-27 04:19Mark Information Network
Mike McCormack, Galway City, Ireland by Matteo Pericoli
2025-06-27 04:14Happiness Information Network
Fyodor Khitruk, 1917–2012 by Sadie Stein
2025-06-27 03:56Co-creation Information Network
In Paris Agreement speech, Trump never acknowledged the reality of global warming
2025-06-27 03:23