T.O.P. Podcast with Michael DiMatteo
Gustave Flaubert, Zora Neale Hurston, and D.H. Lawrence — three writers who published work their societies called dangerous, obscene, or simply wrong. This is Episode 17 of The TOP Podcast with Michael DiMatteo. Flaubert stood trial in a Paris courtroom in 1857, charged with offenses against public morality for refusing to condemn the inner life of a woman his society had decided was expendable. Hurston's 1937 novel Their Eyes Were Watching God was attacked not by the government but by her own literary peers — condemned in the pages of The New Masses for writing in the wrong language and telling the wrong kind of story. Lawrence published Lady Chatterley's Lover privately in Florence in 1928, knowing it would be banned — and it was, in Britain, the United States, Canada, Australia, and elsewhere, until a landmark obscenity trial in 1960 finally set it free. He had died thirty years earlier. Episode 17 traces what each of these writers risked, what it cost them, and why the thing that made their books dangerous is the same thing that made them last. Primary source quotes throughout. Literary history for general listeners.
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