Some Dr.Seuss books taken down

PityOnU

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Jul 5, 2012
Messages
1,182
Trophies
1
XP
1,614
Country
United States
For any inverse-snowflakes who are shooketh that these will no longer be published:

This was not government regulation or mandate. This was a private company in a capitalist system looking at revenue from these particular books and comparing it to the potential for lost profit through damage to the brand. They came to the determination that the latter was greater than the former. This being the case, one of two things is true:
  1. These books are still somewhat popular, but a significant majority of people would object to the imagery, making the brand out of sync with societal norms and probably unable to sell to a large audience.

  2. These books aren't particularly popular, making the very small fraction of people who would be "offended" by the imagery worth more than the loss of sales.
Considering that "Cat in the Hat" was considered to have similar imagery but will still be printed, my guess is it was #2.

If you are still raging with a free speech justice boner, I encourage you to approach the publisher and make an offer for the publishing rights.

Beyond this, taking books out of circulation will require us to write new ones. This is stimulating the economy and creating good paying jobs for modern children's book authors. Why are you so against a healthy job market? "If I Ran The Zoo" was published 70 years ago - pay someone to draw some new pictures, damnit.
 

Jayro

MediCat USB Dev
Developer
Joined
Jul 23, 2012
Messages
12,973
Trophies
4
Location
WA State
Website
ko-fi.com
XP
17,004
Country
United States
I hate censorship in every form of it's existence.

156474024_10221241226072491_5840843125162073071_o.jpg
 

FAST6191

Techromancer
Editorial Team
Joined
Nov 21, 2005
Messages
36,798
Trophies
3
XP
28,321
Country
United Kingdom
For any inverse-snowflakes who are shooketh that these will no longer be published:

This was not government regulation or mandate. This was a private company in a capitalist system looking at revenue from these particular books and comparing it to the potential for lost profit through damage to the brand. They came to the determination that the latter was greater than the former. This being the case, one of two things is true:
  1. These books are still somewhat popular, but a significant majority of people would object to the imagery, making the brand out of sync with societal norms and probably unable to sell to a large audience.

  2. These books aren't particularly popular, making the very small fraction of people who would be "offended" by the imagery worth more than the loss of sales.
Considering that "Cat in the Hat" was considered to have similar imagery but will still be printed, my guess is it was #2.

If you are still raging with a free speech justice boner, I encourage you to approach the publisher and make an offer for the publishing rights.

Beyond this, taking books out of circulation will require us to write new ones. This is stimulating the economy and creating good paying jobs for modern children's book authors. Why are you so against a healthy job market? "If I Ran The Zoo" was published 70 years ago - pay someone to draw some new pictures, damnit.
Ah the old censorship is only censorship when the government (or maybe religion acting as de facto government) does it line. Do we have to do this one again?

Majority? Seems like something that you would have to qualify there. Most times we look at things like this others would claim a vocal minority, and companies thinking twitter = the population at large, which is also a claim but eh.

Equally I am still at a loss as to what was so offensive about it as to deem this sort of thing necessary.

The profits of creative destruction? Are you the villain from the fifth element?

I don't feel like my suggestions were that problematic and I even said that I didn't agree with them stopping production. What I explained are possible ways they could have gone about doing this that would have either been seen better by most or possibly avoided the most controversy. My suggestions do not mean endorsement.
Do we care about avoiding controversy as a general concept? I can understand why the business would possibly want to.
 

FAST6191

Techromancer
Editorial Team
Joined
Nov 21, 2005
Messages
36,798
Trophies
3
XP
28,321
Country
United Kingdom
Are you arguing that publishers have a sacred duty to publish all books forever? You have a very high expectation of publishers.
Not at all. Questioning their rationales, motives, logic and actions however is well within the remit of others though.
 

Xzi

Time to fly, 621
Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2013
Messages
17,736
Trophies
3
Location
The Lands Between
Website
gbatemp.net
XP
8,534
Country
United States
Suess was a very different man at the end of his career than he was at the beginning of it. I think he himself would be fine with these particular books being pulled from publication, if not being in full support of it. Spare me the faux-outrage over the possibility that all records of these books existing are suddenly and simultaneously going to disappear.
 
Last edited by Xzi,

nine0nine

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Jan 21, 2006
Messages
154
Trophies
1
XP
1,748
Country
Albania
meeh, I can see why this is happening, the depictions of racial stereotypes goes against the grain these days but I don't agree with it. I was (accidently) reading an article on Dr Seuss a while back that suggested all his books should be removed from schools due to these images and the fact the Doc wrote a blackface play way back.

I wonder Would Nintendo be have been able to create Mario in 2021 without some PC activist chastising them for stereotyping Italians?
 

Julie_Pilgrim

Secretly three raccoons in a trench coat
Member
Joined
Sep 2, 2020
Messages
2,645
Trophies
3
Location
(REDACTED)
Website
zoey-on-github.github.io
XP
1,884
Country
United States
meeh, I can see why this is happening, the depictions of racial stereotypes goes against the grain these days but I don't agree with it. I was (accidently) reading an article on Dr Seuss a while back that suggested all his books should be removed from schools due to these images and the fact the Doc wrote a blackface play way back.

I wonder Would Nintendo be have been able to create Mario in 2021 without some PC activist chastising them for stereotyping Italians?
Considering the fact no one has said that about mario today, I'm guessing the answer is yes
 
  • Like
Reactions: Xzi and Seliph

Xzi

Time to fly, 621
Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2013
Messages
17,736
Trophies
3
Location
The Lands Between
Website
gbatemp.net
XP
8,534
Country
United States
You'd think in the internet era, with all the shit you see online everyday, that like most would've grown a backbone or numb towards this kinda stuff. Or just, y'know, understand it was a product of the times.
Bah.
People do understand that these books were a product of their time, which is why they weren't selling and the publisher unilaterally decided to pull them. The "I collect racist memorabilia" demographic apparently isn't a large enough economic force to keep products and media from the 50s/60s in high demand.
 

Seliph

Best Girl ʕ •ᴥ•ʔ
Member
Joined
Jul 11, 2016
Messages
1,760
Trophies
0
Location
The People's Republic of Revachol
Website
twitter.com
XP
4,149
Country
United States
I don't particularly care since you can read these books pretty easily online and it was the publisher's decision anyway. I can understand why they wouldn't feel great about it.

I honestly don't think people really cared about these books anyways until false outrage was generated by conservative media pundits about their publisher deciding to pull them. Looking at Google Trends basically confirms this.
dlceqYR.png

Publishers pull books all the time, there are so many more important things to worry about than this.
 
Last edited by Seliph,

MadonnaProject

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Dec 20, 2006
Messages
388
Trophies
1
XP
1,437
Country
Heaven forbid we say japanese and chinese have eyes a certain way. Heaven forbid we say african tribes might have certain features. Afterall, we live in a day and age where facts are just not acceptable.
 

Seliph

Best Girl ʕ •ᴥ•ʔ
Member
Joined
Jul 11, 2016
Messages
1,760
Trophies
0
Location
The People's Republic of Revachol
Website
twitter.com
XP
4,149
Country
United States
Heaven forbid we say japanese and chinese have eyes a certain way. Heaven forbid we say african tribes might have certain features. Afterall, we live in a day and age where facts are just not acceptable.
Cringe. You know those depictions are based on racist caricatures, stop being obtuse.
 
Last edited by Seliph,

Julie_Pilgrim

Secretly three raccoons in a trench coat
Member
Joined
Sep 2, 2020
Messages
2,645
Trophies
3
Location
(REDACTED)
Website
zoey-on-github.github.io
XP
1,884
Country
United States
Heaven forbid we say japanese and chinese have eyes a certain way. Heaven forbid we say african tribes might have certain features. Afterall, we live in a day and age where facts are just not acceptable.
Have you ever seen an actual black or Asian person?
 

MadonnaProject

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Dec 20, 2006
Messages
388
Trophies
1
XP
1,437
Country
Have you ever seen an actual black or Asian person?

I am actually biracial. Asian & African. You, however sound like what we like to call a "typical white guy". Talking down to people, out your arse. Without having a clue.

--------------------- MERGED ---------------------------

Cringe. You know those depictions are based on racist caricatures, stop being obtuse.

Caricatures are often exaggerated, its what makes them "caricatures". This applies to all races. Look at popeye, or any other cartoon. In fact it also applies to animals. If you find it cringe thats on you. People who are grown up, tend to develop thicker skin and realise there's real problems to life.
 

Julie_Pilgrim

Secretly three raccoons in a trench coat
Member
Joined
Sep 2, 2020
Messages
2,645
Trophies
3
Location
(REDACTED)
Website
zoey-on-github.github.io
XP
1,884
Country
United States
I am actually biracial. Asian & African. You, however sound like what we like to call a "typical white guy". Talking down to people, out your arse. Without having a clue.


Last I checked, this wasn't white
8FCB29CC-7B5A-4159-AD66-91212290FB75.jpeg
 

Louse

go play rez
Member
Joined
Dec 8, 2020
Messages
198
Trophies
1
Age
24
Location
Citadel Station
Website
www.h.com
XP
584
Country
United States
Heaven forbid we say japanese and chinese have eyes a certain way. Heaven forbid we say african tribes might have certain features. Afterall, we live in a day and age where facts are just not acceptable.

While I'm all for a censor-less landscape for art and discourse, children's entertainment should be regulated to protect our young impressionable minds. Kids don't have the skills yet to separate a racist stereotype from very useful life lesson.

Leaving this content in is just kinda bad, at least in its current state. It would just cause more people to get the wrong idea about people that they don't know. We don't need more of you.

I am actually biracial. Asian & African. You, however sound like what we like to call a "typical white guy". Talking down to people, out your arse. Without having a clue.

sure™
 

Site & Scene News

Popular threads in this forum

General chit-chat
Help Users
    SylverReZ @ SylverReZ: @Psionic Roshambo, I always see this dude's shorts, he sounds pretty annoying.