Is Free Speech Racist?
Examining the complexities of speech in a multicultural context
Format:Paperback
Publisher:John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Published:24th Jul '20
Should be back in stock very soon
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£35.00(9781509536153)
This thought-provoking book explores the intersection of free speech and racism, questioning how these concepts shape contemporary society. Is Free Speech Racist? reveals critical insights.
The concept of free speech is often at the forefront of public discourse, frequently depicted as being under threat. In Is Free Speech Racist?, Gavan Titley delves into the complexities surrounding this critical issue, observing that discussions about free speech often intersect with debates about race. Titley questions why racism has become a focal point in the ongoing struggles over the boundaries of free expression, suggesting that these discussions reveal deeper societal tensions.
Rather than reiterating the usual arguments about the limits of speech, Is Free Speech Racist? shifts the lens to explore how the principle of free speech is utilized in today’s diverse and media-saturated environments. The book examines the ways in which free speech has been appropriated by far-right movements, the resurgence of 'race realism,' and the contentious politics surrounding immigration and integration. Titley argues that in contexts marked by political strife and public uncertainty regarding racism, the rhetoric of free speech often serves to amplify and perpetuate racist ideologies.
Ultimately, Is Free Speech Racist? provides a critical analysis of contemporary free speech discourse, shedding light on the persistent realities of race and racism in modern society. By unpacking these themes, Titley encourages readers to reconsider the implications of free speech in a multicultural world, prompting a necessary dialogue about its role in both enabling and challenging systemic inequalities.
"This is a small but mighty book."
Angela Saini, BBC Science Focus 'Best Books of 2020'
"Titley’s book offers a detailed, analytical counter-argument to those voices suggesting that the rights of the already entitled are somehow under threat or that speaking out against racism is an assault on public life.” […F]ree speech is always more, rather than less, complex in his analysis of the fluid processes by which it shapes racism."
Times Higher Education
"An excellent contribution to dispelling liberal myths that freedom of expression is impotent and unconditional, and to taking back freedom of expression. […] Titley's short and concise book [is] recommended for any anti-racist thinking and action."
Antirasistisk
"[This book] is clear, manageable and does not reproduce that fakely neutral tone that some academic discourses on race do. It does not shy away from complexity either. This book is both a worthwhile contribution to the history of writing on racism and a timely publication considering recent events. Highly recommended."
Manchester Review of Books
"[O]ne of the clearest accounts that has yet been published of […] how free speech is being misused by those who have turned it into an ideology. […] It's lively, compelling and principled, and anyone who cares about the topic should buy a copy."
David Renton, lives; running
"A particularly necessary reminder to those of us who relate to freedom of expression on a liberal basis […] that the worn-out term 'liberal democracy' is actually based on freedoms and rights that do not arise through reflex responses – that these are processes that require active debate to defend and develop. It is never more important than after attacks on our open societies."
Göteborgs-Posten
"Against accounts that frame freedom of speech in terms of idealized speech acts that serve both moral and utilitarian ends in avowedly enlightened, postracial liberal democracies, Titley asks critical questions about how invocations of free speech are being put to work, in service of whose interests, and to what ends. This framing pushes us past endless, circular debates about free speech as an abstract, idealized liberal democratic good and instead brings prevailing relations of oppression and exploitation sharply into focus."
Alex Khasnabish, Journal for the Study of Radicalism
"Titley writes with an analytical and interrogative eye toward one of democracy's most professed values and tenets—free speech. Clawing his way beneath the surface of popular political rhetoric, Titley implores his audience to reconsider how they understand free speech and its implications."
Sociology of Race and Ethnicity
"A significant contribution to our understanding [of how and why] the far- and racist right in many Western countries have with uneven but significant success managed to appropriate the language and rhetorics of free speech, and weaponize it for the purpose of mainstreaming racism and Islamophobia."
Sindre Bangstad, Ethnic and Racial Studies
"[P]seudoscience has now gone mainstream: it infects public and political discourse on the pandemic, on climate, on medicine and vaccination, on abortion, race and culture. […] As media scholar Gavan Titley points […], dealing with misinformation of this kind is an unequal battle."
Chemistry World
"In this admirably short, tightly argued and easily accessible book […], Titley shows us all what Applied Philosophy (my description, not his) can be, but so often is not: remorselessly logical, but at the same time jargon-free, witty and continually stimulating. The case that he sets out ought to be—but of course will not be—the last word on the matter."
Bob Brecher, Res Publica
"[A]n excellent inquiry into how racist expression has found a home through the alleged 'free speech crisis'."
Irish Marxist Review
"This important contribution embeds contemporary discussions of free speech into Critical Race Theory in subtle, well-argued ways. Titley exemplifies how racisms are advanced through the defense of freedom of speech, and how the latter is used as a blunt weapon to bludgeon efforts to tackle racist expression."
David Theo Goldberg, University of California, Irvine
Priyamvada Gopal, Churchill College, University of Cambridge
"This is an excellent and urgently needed book that offers a key contribution to both academic and public debate on free speech. In a clear, succinct style, Gavan Titley persuasively argues that free speech is often defended in a superficial way, which focuses on speech as a mere channel of ideas and neglects structural inequalities between different speakers."
Matteo Bonotti, Monash University
ISBN: 9781509536160
Dimensions: 188mm x 122mm x 15mm
Weight: 204g
144 pages