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In Frankfurt, Rushdie Battles War on Free Speech - PW Week Ahead


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In an address to the press conference opening the Frankfurt Book Fair, author Salman Rushdie extolled freedom of speech and expression as a basic human right, common to all and not limited to a few. He also cast the book world as under siege and worried that the enemy may have an edge.
"Publishing is a peaceful business,” said Rushdie, though he sees it as approaching a state of war. “Yet publishers and writers are not warriors," he lamented.
Among those listening to the author of Satanic Verses in the ironically named “Illusion” Hall at the Frankfurter Messe fairgrounds, was Andrew Albanese, senior writer at Publishers Weekly. He tells CCC's Chris Kenneally the short speech was a stirring message defending writers and publishers as agents of free expression. It was also a contemporary message -- with allusions to the Charlie Hebdo press massacre and censure for excessive political correctness on American campuses -- that could not help raising memories of events from 25 years ago.
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PW RadioBy Publishers Weekly