That's what a 9/11 family group is asking:
http://www.911families.org/June%202010.html
You'll have to scroll down a bit to find it, it's called "Before your very eyes".
The play deals with 9/11, and the group "9/11 families" asks the question "Should there be plays about 9/11?"
What do you think?
Personally, I'm not offended by 9/11 being used as a subject for art, whether that art be written or visual. I'm an artist and writer myself, currently working on a 9/11 related piece.
It makes me uncomfortable to think of anyone arbitrarily declaring any subject "off limits" to artists or writers, 9/11 or otherwise. One- who gets to make that ruling? Do the most offended among us get to make the rules? If not them, then who? And who decides just what treatment of a given subject is offensive? One person's awful is another person's thought-provoking.
Even if somebody were to rule 9/11 out of bounds as creative idea fodder, then how could they enforce it? Or what gives any group the right to try and enforce such an edict? In Canada and the US, freedom of speech and expression are rights. And that freedom includes speech that isn't neccessarily PC or popular.
My other concern with attempting to shut down artistic works or speech you don't agree with is this:
When you try to suppress bad ideas, you may also be surpressing good ones as well. Stop somebody from writing a play or story, or doing art which makes fun of 9/11, and you may also be shutting down somebody else's well thought out tribute or exploration at the same time. Is that really what we want to happen?
http://www.911families.org/June%202010.html
You'll have to scroll down a bit to find it, it's called "Before your very eyes".
The play deals with 9/11, and the group "9/11 families" asks the question "Should there be plays about 9/11?"
What do you think?
Personally, I'm not offended by 9/11 being used as a subject for art, whether that art be written or visual. I'm an artist and writer myself, currently working on a 9/11 related piece.
It makes me uncomfortable to think of anyone arbitrarily declaring any subject "off limits" to artists or writers, 9/11 or otherwise. One- who gets to make that ruling? Do the most offended among us get to make the rules? If not them, then who? And who decides just what treatment of a given subject is offensive? One person's awful is another person's thought-provoking.
Even if somebody were to rule 9/11 out of bounds as creative idea fodder, then how could they enforce it? Or what gives any group the right to try and enforce such an edict? In Canada and the US, freedom of speech and expression are rights. And that freedom includes speech that isn't neccessarily PC or popular.
My other concern with attempting to shut down artistic works or speech you don't agree with is this:
When you try to suppress bad ideas, you may also be surpressing good ones as well. Stop somebody from writing a play or story, or doing art which makes fun of 9/11, and you may also be shutting down somebody else's well thought out tribute or exploration at the same time. Is that really what we want to happen?
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