▲ | alxlaz 4 days ago | |||||||
> There is a large distance between “removed from curriculum” and “banned”. I suspect that it’s not in the current school graduation requirements either. Not necessarily, early on things got dropped from the curricula all the time because the GUKPiW had banned them, either specifically or by topic. Blanket bans on general topics or activities make it extremely difficult to discuss censorship post-factum. For example, Juliusz Slowacki wasn't banned, but while some of his works could be freely published in some media they were fully or partially banned in other media (notoriously, Television Theatre got in trouble over parts from Kordian). Lots of cultural activities or works weren't banned directly, or not in all forms. | ||||||||
▲ | akho 4 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Yes, “large distance” implies that many in-between options exist. Folk dances, however, were a whole thing with Stalinists (“culture that is national in form, and socialist in content”), so an outright ban would seem out of character. I would probably remove folk dances from school graduation requirements too, if I somehow fumbled into a position where I take those kinds of decisions. | ||||||||
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