THE Governor-General, Bill Hayden, in a speech to a national conference on violence, pointed to the dilemma. He said his liberal conscience was troubled by television and other media violence. The anti-censorship view of liberals two or three decades ago is now under severe challenge. Then it was easy to scoff at the idiocy of censors who wanted to ban Lady Chatterley’s Lover or The Little Red Schoolbook. Then it was a simple battle between art and censors, or harmless idiocy and the censors. The censors did not seem to have much of a case. It was a question of adults being entitled to read, listen to and watch what they want.
Some believe that society is now bearing the fruit of that liberalisation, that violence and demeaning of women is a direct result of the ready availability of material that expresses explicit violence and sexual exploitation. That material now comes in a greater variety of forms. It is not only written material. It now includes videos material and high-resolution sound on CDs. The correlation between the availability of this material and violence in society is not yet proven. It is obviously a subject worthy of much more research and debate.
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