Freedoms of Speech

Anthropological Perspectives on Language, Ethics, and Power

Matei Candea editor Paolo Heywood editor Fiona Wright editor Taras Fedirko editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of Toronto Press

Published:18th Feb '25

Should be back in stock very soon

Freedoms of Speech cover

Bringing together leading anthropologists, this collection sheds light on the vast topic of freedoms of speech from a comparatively human perspective. Freedoms of Speech provides a sustained, empirical exploration of the variety of ways freedom of speech is lived, valued, and contested in practice; envisioned as an ideal; and mediated by various linguistic, ethical, and material forms.

From Ireland to India, from Palestine to West Papua, from contemporary Java to early twentieth-century Britain, and from colonial Vietnam to the contemporary United States, the book broadly interrogates the classic vision of a singular "Western liberal tradition" of freedom of speech, exploring its internal complexities and highlighting alternative perspectives on the relationship between speech, freedom, and constraint in other times and places. Chapters analyse subjects commonly linked to freedom-of-speech debates, shedding new light on familiar topics that include campus speech codes, defamation, and press freedom, while also exploring unexpected ones such as therapy, gift-giving, and martyrdom. These analyses not only provide unexpected perspectives and unique insights but also address a myriad of questions, contributing to a rich, interdisciplinary, and human understanding of the nature of freedom of speech.

“Freedom of speech, recently a major object of debate, has been discussed mostly in its negative forms of silencing within Western societies. Bringing together an exceptional company of anthropologists, Freedoms of Speech explores it, in contrast, through the multiplicity of its expressions across times and cultures, thus offering a ground-breaking reflection on language, ethics, and politics." -- Didier Fassin, Professor, Collège de France and the Institute for Advanced Study
“This book represents anthropology at its best: comparative, counterintuitive, and theoretically sophisticated yet grounded in fieldwork. As the parochiality of any single conception of freedom of speech is exposed, we see a new and urgent sub-field emerging—and one that speaks also to historians, philosophers, and political scientists.” -- Simon Coleman, Chancellor Jackman Professor of Religion, University of Toronto

ISBN: 9781487548841

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 28mm

Weight: 640g

478 pages