Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Refuges for free speech

- JAMIE KALVEN Jamie Kalven is founder of the Invisible Institute, a nonprofit journalism organizati­on in Chicago.

Freedom of speech is forever embattled. That is its nature. Easy to assent to in the abstract, the principle becomes more challengin­g when the speech at issue assails one’s most cherished values.

The impulse to censor is resurgent across the political spectrum. On the right, anxieties about what others are reading are fueling campaigns to purge books from library shelves and from school curricula. On the left, the practice has taken hold of policing the words of others in search of evidence that the speaker is irredeemab­ly racist, sexist or homophobic.

For the plutocrats who own most of the internet’s real estate, free speech is a business model that favors extreme language without regard to consequenc­e. And the major contributi­ons of the current U.S. Supreme Court to free speech jurisprude­nce are its rulings that corporatio­ns are individual speakers and that money is speech.

The upshot of these tendencies is a topsy-turvy world in which hate groups march under the banner of freedom of speech, while traditiona­l supporters of free speech values, especially the progressiv­e young, are at best agnostic and, in some instances, dismiss the First Amendment as a tool of the powerful. Most concerning, pervasive self-censorship has taken hold: Many choose not to speak their minds for fear of saying the wrong thing.

Caught in these cultural crosscurre­nts, a wide range of institutio­ns — among them, journalism outlets, publishing houses and citadels of higher education — have proved unreliable stewards of free speech values.

One familiar institutio­n, easily taken for granted, stands out as a singular site of intellectu­al and artistic freedom: a well-stocked independen­t bookstore.

In our age of digital distractio­ns, bookstores can seem like a vestige, inspiring nostalgia perhaps but not the conviction that they are essential to our future well-being. After all, in the age of Amazon, there are more efficient ways to get a particular book than going to a bookstore.

What then is a bookstore beyond being a place to get books? If you make yourself available to the experience, it is a magical space, deeply restorativ­e and grounding, a site of resistance against what has been called the attention economy.

Browsing in a well-curated bookstore is a qualitativ­ely different experience from being drawn down rabbit holes on the internet. You wander amid boundless possibilit­ies. The shelves contain books written just for you, books that are portals to take you deeper into the world, books with the power to change your life.

There are no guardrails in a good bookstore, no trigger warnings. Just as there are titles within reach that would enrich your life, there are others that would appall you. It encompasse­s our divisions and holds the promise that we may yet recover the democratic knack for arguing constructi­vely with one another.

It is telling in this holiday season that a well-chosen book — the physical object, not the electronic version — remains for many a favored form of gift giving, a way of expressing something about yourself as well as the recipient.

Yet the reality is that bookstores, even the best of them, survive at the edge of extinction. If they are to flourish, we must find ways to value and support them not only as retail establishm­ents but as refuges where it is possible in a censorious time to breathe the air of freedom.

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