Since the horrific news of Salman Rushdie鈥檚 stabbing broke, I鈥檝e been revisiting his lectures and interviews. I came across an article in The Observer from 1989, where he said, 鈥淟iterature is where I go to explore the highest and lowest places in human society and in the human spirit, where I hope to find not absolute truth but the truth of the tale, of the imagination and of the heart.鈥
Rushdie鈥檚 statement about literature made me reflect on another piece of news that broke earlier this month. According to an by The Times, UK universities have contracted the 鈥渉arm鈥 virus from their cousins across the pond and have started removing 鈥渉armful鈥 literature from reading lists to protect students. Let鈥檚 take a quick look at some of the titles that have been nixed.
The University of Essex has permanently withdrawn Colson Whitehead鈥檚 2017 Pulitzer-winning novel The Underground Railroad because of its 鈥済raphic description of violence and abuse of slavery鈥. At the University of Exeter, students can opt out of reading Mary Prince, the first narrative of a Black woman to be published in the UK, in 1831, to avoid the 鈥済raphic accounts of slavery鈥. History students at Lancaster University can choose not to read The Diary of Thomas Thistlewood, the testimony of a Jamaican slave owner, because it has details of 鈥渟exual assaults and extreme violence鈥. Eimear McBride鈥檚 A Girl is a Half-Formed Thing, Evie Wyld's聽All the Birds, Singing, Thomas Meinecke鈥檚 Tomboy: the list of possible opt-outs goes on.
This notion that students may be harmed by works of literature is predicated on a profound misunderstanding of the value of literature. One does not read merely to be entertained or to have one鈥檚 world view confirmed. Rather, the reading of literature cultivates an aesthetic sensibility, a deeper sense of empathy, and the ability to see the world from different perspectives. It allows you to be taken out of yourself in a way that only art can do. Indeed, Joyce Carol Oates goes so far as to say that it is 鈥渢he sole means by which we slip, involuntarily, often helplessly, into another鈥檚 skin, another鈥檚 voice, another鈥檚 soul鈥. Literature gives you access to people and worlds unknown.
探花视频
Literature also helps you see the particular as universal. As F. Scott Fitzgerald noted, when you read, 鈥淵ou discover that your longings are universal longings, that you鈥檙e not lonely and isolated from anyone. You belong.鈥 Or, as James Baldwin put it, 鈥淵ou think your pain and your heartbreak are unprecedented in the history of the world, but then you read.鈥 Literature allows you to see how you are larger than yourself by revealing the webs that connect you with the multitude of humanity across time and space, while simultaneously making you realise your own insignificance.
In many instances, the transformative power of literature lies in its ability to shock and surprise: to jolt us out of complacency, forcing us to contend with the uncertain, the strange and even the ugly. For Franz Kafka this was the whole point of reading: In his view, 鈥渨e ought to read only the kind of books that wound or stab us...We need the books that affect us like a disaster, that grieve us deeply, like the death of someone we loved more than ourselves, like being banished into forests far from everyone, like suicide. A book must be an axe for the frozen sea inside us.鈥
探花视频
Having to contend with things that disturb us opens the door for the kind of contemplation that is necessary for growth. In that sense, scrubbing British curricula clean of the voices that give us an insight into the violence of slavery does students a grave disservice: their understanding of history will be shallow and distorted.
We would also do well to remember that one of the things offered by literature 鈥 especially of the tragic and disturbing kind 鈥 is catharsis. Rooted in the Greek kathairein (cleanse) and katharos (pure), catharsis was first used to describe the effect of a tragedy on the spectator by Aristotle in the Poetics. It is the process that allows readers to work through their anxieties and negative emotions vicariously, by identifying with characters and relating to their predicament. It allows for an emotional release that provides deeper insight into oneself. In this way, literature, far from being 鈥渉armful鈥, has what Maya Angelou called 鈥渓ife-giving power鈥.
Some critics have dismissed the Times investigation as a tempest in a teapot and averred that only a handful of UK institutions have begun removing 鈥渉armful鈥 books from syllabi. But I would like to remind them that it only takes a few to begin normalising such removals before others follow suit 鈥 the recent proliferation of similar moves to 鈥渁ccommodate鈥 students at American colleges and universities ought to be instructive.
As for the dons who have nixed books from their reading lists or allowed students to opt out of 鈥渄ifficult鈥 literature, they would do well to reflect on Rushdie鈥檚 conception of literature as a means to 鈥渆xplore the highest and lowest places in human society and in the human spirit鈥. Ought students be spared any graphic account he might subsequently write of the low place in the human spirit to which his refusal to be silenced has reduced him?
探花视频
Surely not. Depriving our students of access to the full range of human experience in the name of protecting them only, ultimately, does them harm.
Amna Khalid is associate professor in the department of history at Carleton College, Minnesota.
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?








