Weather_Lady
Well-Known Member
I know this case is a little different. In general people throw around "cancel culture" while simultaneously refusing to acknowledge the bad things that were said or depicted because it doesn't affect them personally. I also don't see it as damage control. There was no uproar over these books, and It's not like there's hate speech in them. Just little things like, "hmm, maybe we could do without this." Did anyone even ask the publisher or Seuss estate to do this? It seems that they decided to do it on their own. edited for incorrect vocabulary
According to the news, it was the Seuss estate that decided to stop publishing a few select titles, or giving out the rights to do something with them. There was, as you say, no uproar that brought it about -- it was just their own decision to stop promoting a few specific books (a miniscule fraction of the dozens of books Dr. Seuss wrote and illustrated) that they recognized contained racially insensitive caricatures. Even though publishers and libraries have been pulling books for similar reasons for decades now, the media picked up on this particular move, the extreme right branded it as "shameful cancel culture" and something to shout about, and now we're off to the races.
To borrow a Seussian phrase, I hope this media-driven Butter Battle dies down quickly. Whether people are seeking to end racial injustice or cancel culture or both, this particular episode isn't a worthy enough example of either one for them to waste their time on.