Submitted by _green_cloak_ t3_115wh0b in books
After hearing about Penguin's amendments, my mind thought back to the quote from Orwell's 1984:
>"Every record has been destroyed or falsified, every book rewritten, every picture has been repainted, every statue and street building has been renamed, every date has been altered. And the process is continuing day by day and minute by minute. History has stopped. Nothing exists except an endless present in which the Party is always right."
While I'm not wanting to ignite a discussion specifically about Penguin changing the words of Roald Dahl's books, is it fair to link 'reviews' (i.e. amendments) to books by publishers to 'ensure that it can continue to be enjoyed by all today' to the practices of Orwell's 'Ministry of Truth'?
(Of course the 'Ministry of Truth' is fictitious, and Penguin and other publishers are not guilty of all out Orwellian practices, but personally I can't ignore their similarity in light of the recent events).
EDIT: This post was a question for a reason, and for the record I accept that Orwell's Ministry of Truth from 1984 isn't really that similar to the publisher in question (hence why I posted a question style post in the first place), and I've now learnt what that a better way of describing what I feel irked by is in fact bowdlerisation or expurgation.
Tall-Display-8219 t1_j93qybp wrote
A private company publishing edited versions of fictional books is not the same as a totalitarian government seeking to alter peoples perception of reality by altering historical documents.
Consider the following: people are not being forced to read the new versions, the old versions are not being banned or outlawed by any government, this is just one publisher, the edits are minor and don't fundamentally change the stories, the books are fictional anyway so never represented the "truth" about anything to begin with.
So no... its not even remotely the same thing.