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Book of the week

What is free speech? : the history of a dangerous idea

book cover

"Faramerz Dabhoiwala argues that free speech, though a central democratic value, owes its origin and evolution less to high-minded ideals than to venal interests. Shaped by greed, technological change, and the insoluble challenges of slander and falsehood, free speech is inherently contradictory--both a basis of liberty and a weapon of the powerful"

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Last updated 10/14/2025 by S. Wilson

University Archives & Digital Special Collections

Voice of the Fugitive - February 12, 1851
J. W. C. Pennington
Colored American - May 29, 1841
Provincial Freeman - February 2, 1856
Voice of the Fugitive November 18, 1852
Colored American - September 1, 1838
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Charles Lenox Remond
Weekly Anglo-African - July 14, 1860
Colored American - October 20, 1838
Sarah Parker Remond
William Craft
Voice of the Fugitive - September 24, 1851
Pacific Appeal - Aprill 5, 1862
Provincial Freeman - November 3, 1855
Colored American - December 16, 1837
Voice of the Fugitive - July 29, 1852
Samuel Ringgold Ward
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