Random House publishers have decided not to publish the novel "Jewel of Medina" about the six-year-old wife of the prophet Muhammad, on the grounds that it "might be offensive to some in the Muslim community". Columnist Mike Hume voices his disgruntlement in The Times: "It looks like another example of a quiet wave of self-censorship and cultural cowardice sweeping Western art circles. Two years ago, when the Deutsche opera in Berlin scrapped a production of Mozart's Idomeneo for fear that it might offend some Muslims, I described it as 'pre-emptive grovelling'. This now appears to be the modus operandi of the transatlantic arts elites. ... The threat to freedom here does not come from a few Islamic radicals, but from the invertebrate liberals of the cultural establishment who have so lost faith in themselves that they will surrender their freedoms before anybody starts a fight. ... Of course, such pre-emptive grovelling only encourages any zealot with a blog to demand even more censorship. ... Pre-emptive grovelling, encouraged from the top down by our illiberal authorities, is bad for the arts and for society. The arts can only flourish in a climate of cultural anarchy rather than compulsion and conformity." (12/08/2008)
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