Bitchin' Blog Posts

The Jewel of Medina is Now On Sale - No, Wait. Nevermind.

by SB Sarah | August 06, 2008 | Wednesday at 6:29 pm | 405 Comments

The Jewel of MedinaFrom the “Holy Shit” Department comes an article that was highlighted in today’s Publisher’s Lunch and dispatched to me by TeddyPig (Hi Teddy!): the Wall Street Journal reports that Random House is stopping publication of The Jewel of Medina and giving the rights back to the author, six days before the publication date out of fear of fallout from the Muslim community over the book’s content.

The book by Sherry Jones is a work of historical fiction based on the life of Aisha, one of the wives of the prophet Mohammed. Random House paid a $100k advance for the work but when UT Professor Denise Spellberg read an ARC, she denounced the book as a “very ugly, stupid piece of work” (note to authors: Don’t ask her for a cover quote. Ever.) and said, “I don’t have a problem with historical fiction. I do have a problem with the deliberate misinterpretation of history. You can’t play with a sacred history and turn it into soft core pornography.”

Wait, wait, before you pound your head on your desk, there’s more. Ms. Spellberg alerted Shahed Amunullah, a guest lecturer and editor of altmuslim.com, who spread the word to a listserv of Muslim graduate students. From there that email appeared the website “Hussaini Youth,” and within three hours, a person published “a seven-point strategy to ensure ‘the writer withdraws this book from the stores and apologise all the muslims across the world.’”

Now you can bang your head.

After Ms. Spellberg had a conversation with an editor at Knopf, an imprint of Random House with whom Spellberg has a book contract, alarm was raised within the company that the book, the author, and the employees of the publisher could be the victims of “widespread violence.” Spellberg followed up the conversation with a letter from her attorney stating that Spellberg would sue if her name were associated with the novel.

The story has set the internet on fire, pretty much, from Galley Cat to political bloggers weighing in. I’m trying to find an excerpt, a copy, anything about this book, because six days before publication must mean somewhere, somehow, someone has a copy and I have an eBay account. You have a copy? Let’s talk.

I must also note that according to the WSJ article, Sherry Jones has signed a termination agreement and her agent can shop the book to other publishers. I hope another publisher brings the book out, and soon, because one hissyfit and the threat of terrorist action should not block anything, let alone a historical fiction novel.

Filed: General Bitching, The Link-O-Lator

Tagged: make the burning stop, history, ebay, bloggers

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  1. Chanel19 said on 08.06.08 at 06:40 PM • [comment link]

    I keep hearing in the media that Islam is a religion of peace, love, tolerance and promotion of education.

    Yup, sure sounds like it.

    action79:  maybe 79 virgins should smack the publisher around the back of the head?

  2. Elyssa said on 08.06.08 at 06:42 PM • [comment link]

    That’s just downright scary. 

    I just tried looking for it on Amazon, but it’s like the book does not exist.  It’s still showing up on Bamm, Amazon uk and Amazon ca.  But really… to cancel a book because of fear?!  Plain ridiculous.

  3. Gwen Mitchell said on 08.06.08 at 06:45 PM • [comment link]

    Since when has ‘this might offend some people’ become a good enough reason to censor our freedom of expression?  It’s a sad, sad day when fear of terrorism makes us lay down one of our most sacred rights as Americans. *shakes head*

  4. azteclady said on 08.06.08 at 06:45 PM • [comment link]

    Color me not surprised, if indignant.

    Dan Brown can talk about Mary Madgalen and insert all sorts of weird stuff in Christianity’s ‘sacred history’ but dog forbid the same is done with Muslim history.

    Huhuh

  5. Anaquana said on 08.06.08 at 06:47 PM • [comment link]

    This disgusts me.

    If this book were about any other religion it would have been published no matter what anybody said or threatened to do.

  6. SB Sarah said on 08.06.08 at 06:48 PM • [comment link]

    re: Islam meaning “Peace” - it does.  But alas, the root word of “Fundamental” is “mental.” And some folks define “peace” as “doing things my way.”

  7. MoJo said on 08.06.08 at 06:51 PM • [comment link]

    I’d publish it if I had any $$$ to offer but killer royalties.

    Which I don’t.  So I can’t.

  8. Ocy said on 08.06.08 at 06:52 PM • [comment link]

    ...y’know, the controversy just makes me want to read the book.  Now I’m off to do some desperate internet hunting to see what I can dig up.

  9. Barb Ferrer said on 08.06.08 at 06:52 PM • [comment link]

    I’m waiting to see how long it is before Dr. Spellberg announces a deal for a historical fiction based on the life of one of the wives of Mohammed?  Or perhaps she’ll just create an alternate prophet, the one no one knew about, and then writes about his wives.

    Me?  Cynical?  Whyever would you think that?

  10. Chanel19 said on 08.06.08 at 06:56 PM • [comment link]

    Ah, but most nations founded on Judeo-Christian principles don’t own a hell of a lot of the world’s oil reserves.  Can’t upset the Gulf States now, can we?

    ball96:  the balls in our court and this shouldn’t be a 96 hour wonder on the internet.

  11. Victoria Dahl said on 08.06.08 at 06:58 PM • [comment link]

    This is ridiculous. How many insane works of fiction have been written about religious figures of other religions? Too many to count.

    Also, “(note to authors: Don’t ask her for a cover quote. Ever.)” is the best piece of writing advice I’ve ever heard.

  12. S Andrew Swann said on 08.06.08 at 07:03 PM • [comment link]

    If she can’t find a publisher she should pull a Cory Doctorow and release it into Creative Commons, no money, but the thought police would blow a blood vessel trying to suppress it then.

  13. kirsten saell said on 08.06.08 at 07:04 PM • [comment link]

    If a religion can’t maintain its dignity despite naysayers, scrutiny and the odd insult, that really says something.

    This reminds me of those protests a couple of years ago when over someone accused Islam of being a violent religion. Muslims took to the streets, chanting, burning effigies and uttering threats. “How dare you say we’re violent!? Say it again, and we’ll kill you!!”

    *disclaimer: as always, the feasibility of any religion is largely dependent on the circumspection and behavior of its followers. Just because some Muslims are prone to bad behavior does not mean all of them are, or that their religion is any more flawed than any other. Thank you.

    **disclaimer added in a probably fultile attempt to avoid a shitstorm of fervent religious defensiveness.

  14. Kalen Hughes said on 08.06.08 at 07:07 PM • [comment link]

    Are you fucking kidding me? Is Salman Rushdie also having his contracts canceled? Is it “too dangerous” to publish him as well? I mean he had a freaken jihad called down upon him and last time I checked, and he is still in print.

    You have got to be fucking kidding me . . . 

    This book just got publicity that couldn’t be bought. Dollars to donuts Random House “reconsiders” (assuming this wasn’t some kind of publicity grab in the first place). If they don’t they’re morons.

  15. Kimberly Van Meter said on 08.06.08 at 07:08 PM • [comment link]

    As a journalist this pokes at a very raw nerve. By condoning censorship under the guise of “protection” it only propagates more of the same f*cked up philosophy. To cave under pressure of terrorist action puts power in the wrong hands. Where does it stop? That’s the scarier question…

  16. megalith said on 08.06.08 at 07:16 PM • [comment link]

    I hope the public commentary is hitting particularly hard on Spellman, who acted like a hysterical, hate-mongering zealot. How could the book possibly be worse than what she did to this author? Disgraceful. With people like her around, we don’t need terrorists.

    Let’s hope this goes the way of the Rachael Ray scarf nonsense. The sooner the book finds a publisher, the sooner we’ll all be able to actually read it and make up our own minds.

  17. AgTigress said on 08.06.08 at 07:20 PM • [comment link]

    Oh dear, this is very distressing. 

    As it happens, I am wholly in agreement with Dr. Spellberg on just one point, namely ‘the deliberate misinterpretation of history’, and this is why I have no time for the many ‘alternative history’ novels that are so popular today. 

    But suppressing a work of fiction because it might offend a particular religious or ideological group is wholly unacceptable in our culture.  Freedom of speech - and writing - is something that we should treasure and defend.  I suspect I should dislike the book, but I defend passionately the right of the author and the publishers to publish it.

  18. megalith said on 08.06.08 at 07:22 PM • [comment link]

    And that would be Spellberg. Denise Spellberg, not Spellman. Spellberg, the hysterical, hate-mongering zealot. Okay?

  19. dawnm said on 08.06.08 at 07:24 PM • [comment link]

    The saddest thing is that none of this surprises me.
    Except WTF were they thinking in asking a professor (mid East & religious studies ) for a cover quote for a piece of ( I would presume given Spellmen says it’s soft core porn ) romantic historical fiction?

  20. dawnm said on 08.06.08 at 07:34 PM • [comment link]

    OK apart from anything else here’s a quote from the book quoted by Wall St Journal

    The novel, for example, includes a scene on the night when Muhammad consummated his marriage with Aisha: “the pain of consummation soon melted away. Muhammad was so gentle. I hardly felt the scorpion’s sting. To be in his arms, skin to skin, was the bliss I had longed for all my life.”        “

    Can anyone say purple prose in Arabic?

  21. Leah said on 08.06.08 at 07:40 PM • [comment link]

    You know, I can see Ms. Spellberg thinking, “wow, someone might not like this and cause a big stink, and given the cartoon mess, and Rushdie, well, I don’t want to have my name on it.  Maybe I should mention this to my publishing colleague, in the way off chance that no one else has thought of this.” (because you know others did).  I can’t really fault her for being hypercautious.  BUT—-then she turned around and ratted this author and her book out to someone she had to know was going to take this or some other negative action.  That, to me, is really kind of wicked and unforgiveable.  And she wants her name out of it?  Her name will be forever associated with it.

  22. Marcella Campbell said on 08.06.08 at 07:40 PM • [comment link]

    Denise Spellberg’s maelstrom of self-righteous quotable quotes isn’t because a woman wrote a book based on the fictionalized life of a woman on the periphery of Islam, is it? I’m sure that’s not why Salman Rushdie never gets an Undo on his books even UNDER THREAT OF A REAL FATWA (and even when some of them are uneven, but that’s a sidebar).

    I’m massively ignorant on this topic right now (reading furiously to catch up on trends in romance publishing) but isn’t there already like an entire imprint devoted to American women and Arab men? No?

    Anyhow, I love it when romance brings people who are traditionally marginalized in the US to the forefront, and I hate hate hate that this may frighten publishers away from helping in that effort.

  23. Carrie Lofty said on 08.06.08 at 07:41 PM • [comment link]

    If you can’t write soft-core porn about Muhammad’s wives, the terrorists have won.

  24. megalith said on 08.06.08 at 07:46 PM • [comment link]

    And it’s Barb for the win! Turns out Dr. Spellberg is the author of a feminist book about Aisha, wife of Mohammed. Jones read Spellberg’s book, liked it, and suggested Spellberg be asked for a quote. Apparently, Spellberg was so shocked and appalled that Jones’s book included sex between Mohammed and his wife that she felt compelled to warn not only Muslims but Jones’s publisher that it would likely cause a jihad if published. Apparently, depicting Mohammed having sex with his wife is “making fun of the prophet” in Spellberg’s opinion.

    Alrighty, then.

  25. SB Sarah said on 08.06.08 at 07:46 PM • [comment link]

    isn’t there already like an entire imprint devoted to American women and Arab men?

    Yeah, but where’s the romance in fatwa? “The Sheikh’s Convenient Virgin’s Deaththreat” or “At the Sheikh’s Fatwa’s Bidding” are really not what makes good romance. The bodyguard alone is too distracting of a plot point.

  26. Barb Ferrer said on 08.06.08 at 07:48 PM • [comment link]

    The author of the novel put the academic on her list of people to query for blurbs because she had read and admired a work of the Dr. Spellberg’s on A’isha.

    The more I think on this, the more it infuriates me.  Dr. Spellberg had so many different recourses—as an academic with a specialty in this culture and religion, she had to know what the reaction would be, which in my book, turns it into something very calculated and far more ugly than she purports the book to be. 

    And if she thinks that “the pain of consummation soon melted away. Muhammad was so gentle. I hardly felt the scorpion’s sting. To be in his arms, skin to skin, was the bliss I had longed for all my life,” equates to “soft core pornography,” well then, there’s a lot she’s been missing out on.  And as far as it being a deliberate misinterpretation of history… what?  She was there?

    Feh.

  27. Linda Blowney said on 08.06.08 at 07:50 PM • [comment link]

  28. megalith said on 08.06.08 at 07:51 PM • [comment link]

    No, no, no. Where’s your imagination, Sarah? The bodyguard is there for the Sheik’s Menage a Fatwa.

  29. Marcella Campbell said on 08.06.08 at 07:57 PM • [comment link]

    Yeah, but where’s the romance in fatwa?

    I would buy any book with the byline “Puts the F in fatwa!” Anytime, anywhere.

    Not to insult the ubiquity and extreme profitability of the romance publishing industry, but, if this professor lady hadn’t made this enormous and unnecessary stink, what are the odds that Osama bin Laden would have gotten his latest shipment from his romance book club and flipped the freak out over this novel? Like, why is this necessary?

  30. MoJo said on 08.06.08 at 08:02 PM • [comment link]

    The bodyguard is there for the Sheik’s Menage a Fatwa.

    That’s the funniest thing I’ve read all day.

  31. azteclady said on 08.06.08 at 08:03 PM • [comment link]

    Regarding Barb Ferrer’s info…

    Well then. I certainly hope that if any violence is committed against Jones because of a novel that may never actually be, you know, read by people who might—if they could read it—feel some offense over it, Dr Spellberg is charged with instigating a hate crime.

    Of all the unbelievable criminal stupidity.

  32. shewhohashope said on 08.06.08 at 08:09 PM • [comment link]

    I’m sorry to get in the way of the outrage here, but where exactly was there any threat of ‘terrorist action’? If I recall correctly a lot of Christian groups were up in arms (so to speak) about the Da Vinci Code, but no-one equated that with terrorism.

    I just get sick of people immediately making that connecton.

    To all the people making Rushdie comparisons, there is no longer ‘a fatwa’ on him. The Iranian government backed out of that back in 1998. And while we’re on the topic fatwa =/= death threat. It’s a religious ruling made by a scholar, and in this case Ayatolla Khomeini the spiritual leader of Iran back in 1989..

    And Salman Rushdie is a man writing Seriouis Literary Fiction [TM] and a Booker Prize winner. This lady is a) a woman b) I don’t quite recall her name even now and c) is writing genre fiction, and romance at that.

    As a Muslim woman myself, I don’t approve of fiction being written about the Prophet (saws) or Aisha (ra). And I don’t see why people shouldn’t be able to protest/express their feelings freely in a non-violent/non-threatening manner.

    NB. This is not a statement of intent to participate in terorist activities, dear God.

  33. Mfred said on 08.06.08 at 08:13 PM • [comment link]

    This has nothing to do with Islam as a religion or Muslims as people.  This is all about jack-assery and hysteria. 

    Spellberg, obviously, is the jackass, for fomenting hysteria and then fanning the flames that rose up around her. 

    The publishers are jackasses and idiots for giving in to the hysteria, making idiotic decisions based on hysteria, and then using hysteria to justify their own idiocy.

    Mainly tho, I think its a sad commentary on the current state of the world, that knee-jerk reactions are taken as appropriate responses to something that could have been settled by saying (and I’m looking at you Ms. Spellberg),

    “Sorry, I don’t think this is a good book”

  34. Stephanie said on 08.06.08 at 08:14 PM • [comment link]

    If she can’t find a publisher she should pull a Cory Doctorow and release it into Creative Commons, no money, but the thought police would blow a blood vessel trying to suppress it then.

    But it would be so funny to watch!

    Also, I agree with Mr. Swann completely. Not just because I’m a fan of Creative Commons publishing (or, you know, Free [Legal] Books on the Internet). Mostly because I’d love to see the head-splodey.

  35. tasha said on 08.06.08 at 08:16 PM • [comment link]

    In the interest of fairness, this did not happen “six days before the publication date”; the WSJ article clearly indicates that the decision to “postpone indefinitely” came in May.

  36. Barb Ferrer said on 08.06.08 at 08:19 PM • [comment link]

    I’m sorry to get in the way of the outrage here, but where exactly was there any threat of ‘terrorist action’?

    From the Wall Street Journal article
    Meanwhile back in New York City, Jane Garrett, an editor at Random House’s Knopf imprint, dispatched an email on May 1 to Knopf executives, telling them she got a phone call the evening before from Ms. Spellberg (who happens to be under contract with Knopf to write “Thomas Jefferson’s Qur’an.”)

    “She thinks there is a very real possibility of major danger for the building and staff and widespread violence,” Ms. Garrett wrote. “Denise says it is ‘a declaration of war . . . explosive stuff . . . a national security issue.’ Thinks it will be far more controversial than the satanic verses and the Danish cartoons. Does not know if the author and Ballantine folks are clueless or calculating, but thinks the book should be withdrawn ASAP.”

    Perhaps not a terrorist threat, per se, but definitely, the fanning of flames.

  37. Jody W. said on 08.06.08 at 08:20 PM • [comment link]

    I trust the author got to keep the advance.  And maybe a judgement in her favor for pain and suffering? 

    Am also goggling at the “soft core porn” summation if the deflowering was as detailed as the book got in that respect.

  38. Sandia said on 08.06.08 at 08:21 PM • [comment link]

    i totally think this spellberg is a dingleberry.  i read the wsj article and i’m amazed that the people who passed around how horrible the book is without forming their own opinion - they just transmitted dr. spellberg’s opinion that it was offensive. 

    when will people learn that they should condem something they haven’t read.  drrr grrr…..

    on the other hand, i’m at the office and couldn’t stop laughing at the sheik’s menage a fatwa…. bwahahahaha…..

  39. Silver James said on 08.06.08 at 08:25 PM • [comment link]

    I’m supposed to worry about the sensibilities of a group of people who murder daughters, sisters, wives and other FEMALE relatives because some asshole prick got his fucking honor bent out of shape? Who torture and mutilate women so they can’t enjoy sex?

    I would never have bought this book. But if it gets published, you can be damn certain that I will by as many copies as I can!

    Dr. Spellberg, I hope you rot in a slush pile of academic obscurity.

      Yeah, but where’s the romance in fatwa?

    I would buy any book with the byline “Puts the F in fatwa!” Anytime, anywhere.

    AMEN and HALLELUJAH, Marcella!

    The bodyguard is there for the Sheik’s Menage a Fatwa.

    *chokes* Oh god, Megalith….I’m writing that down!

  40. Natalie said on 08.06.08 at 08:28 PM • [comment link]

    shewhohashope, why does it matter that Salman Rushdie is an award winning male who writes serious literature and Sherry Jones is a non-award winning female who writes genre fiction?  Do they not both have an equal right to freedom of expression in the United States? 

    Of course, publishers aren’t agents of government and they can make whatever decision they want about publishing or not-publishing a book, but to claim that Rushdie has more of a right to blaspheme in fiction than Jones because he’s a man who has won awards and Jones isn’t is, well, ridiculous.

  41. shewhohashope said on 08.06.08 at 08:29 PM • [comment link]

    Perhaps not a terrorist threat, per se, but definitely, the fanning of flames.

    Okay, but as much as the book doesn’t warrant what Spellberg said, Spellberg’s statements don’t amount to terrorist threats.

    What exactly was being said by the Muslim students protesting this?

  42. Stephanie said on 08.06.08 at 08:34 PM • [comment link]

    And while we’re on the topic fatwa =/= death threat.

    You are, of course, correct in general; I know very little about the language. However, Salman Rushdie’s specific fatwa (or at least the one about him) DID call for his execution. It is, I guess, the fact that this is pretty much the only fatwa that the average American has ever heard of that leads us to conflate ALL fatwa(s) with the one that called for Rushdie’s execution.

    Not that I even referred to it, but thanks for the moment of education. You got me swarming around Wikipedia about Arabic language issues. :)

    However, the fact that you are a Muslim woman and you don’t approve of fiction being written about the Prophet and Aisha —well, I know that there were tons of Christians who got mad about The DaVinci Code, even before it was published, and publishers didn’t take their opinions, either. Even though I don’t necessarily believe that turnabout is fair play, I still see this—as I would have seen a retraction of The DaVinci Code—as an act of censorship of which I do not approve. (Not that my approval means one whit to anyone in the world, either.)

  43. KTG said on 08.06.08 at 08:39 PM • [comment link]

    Unbelievable.


    “As a Muslim woman myself, I don’t approve of fiction being written about the Prophet (saws) or Aisha (ra). And I don’t see why people shouldn’t be able to protest/express their feelings freely in a non-violent/non-threatening manner.”

    No one is debating that, shewhohashope. That this book won’t get published for fear of “major danger for the building and staff and widespread violence,” Ms. Garrett wrote. “Denise says it is ‘a declaration of war . . . explosive stuff . . . a national security issue.’”. Yeah. That is threatening the lives of people over a story. Many religions have sacred history, we also have freedom of press. If this book will upset Muslims, perhaps they shouldn’t read it?

  44. Barb Ferrer said on 08.06.08 at 08:45 PM • [comment link]

    Okay, but as much as the book doesn’t warrant what Spellberg said, Spellberg’s statements don’t amount to terrorist threats.

    I dunno, to me, Spellberg’s comments are pretty incendiary.  In any case, Random House Group deputy publisher Tom Perry says that the company received “from credible and unrelated sources, cautionary advice not only that the publication of this book might be offensive to some in the Muslim community, but also that it could incite acts of violence by a small, radical segment.” They postponed publication “for the safety of the author, employees of Random House, booksellers and anyone else who would be involved in distribution and sale of the novel.” Last month a termination agreement was executed so that agent Natasha Kern could shop the book to other publishers.

    So, unless he’s lying through his teeth, the “credible and unrelated sources” part of the quote suggests that it wasn’t simply Spellberg who was saying that publishing the book could be potentially dangerous.

    As far as what the Muslim students were stating in their seven point plan to make Jones cave, I have no idea.  It showed up on a listserve and then a blogger took it and ran with it.  If I’m reading the WSJ article correctly, it was in one of the blog responses that the plan to ensure “the writer withdraws this book from the stores and apologise all the muslims across the world,” was proposed.

    I mean, most writers want to incite strong reactions—but with their actual words, not the promise (or threat) of them.  I just hope to one day get a chance to judge for myself, on strictly literary merits because you know, work of fiction.

  45. Chanel19 said on 08.06.08 at 08:52 PM • [comment link]

    Hell, on behalf of those of Scottish origin, I am still awaiting an apology for all the bad jokes made at our expense.  I guess we (collective “we”) as an ethnic group/nation have tougher skins.

    all97:  come on spaminator I’m sure there are more than 97 scots reading this.

  46. shewhohashope said on 08.06.08 at 08:53 PM • [comment link]

    I wasn’t talking specifically to you about the ‘fatwa’ issue Stephanie (I get the urge to to spell that with too many ‘e’s because of Meyer) it’s just something that annoys me in general.

    And I’m not calling for this book to be banned or burned or not to be printed, and I’d be uncomfortable if it was (I assume this book is coming out anyway), I just think you can go further to express your feelings than ‘not reading the book’ and stilll not be a terrorist.

    re: Spellberg’s comments, it really dpends on how she said it. There is a line between making a veiled threat and believing that this book would be dangerous and warning the publisher and making it up as a threat to stop the book being published. I can’t really judge based on what little I know of her.

  47. Imogen Howson said on 08.06.08 at 08:55 PM • [comment link]

    Okay, but as much as the book doesn’t warrant what Spellberg said, Spellberg’s statements don’t amount to terrorist threats.

    What exactly was being said by the Muslim students protesting this?

    Yes, I’m interested in that, too.  And kind of bewildered.  It sounds as if Spellberg decided (by herself?  because someone else told her?) there was a risk of violence from extremists, and Random House panicked.  Which just sounds kind of…hysterical.  And not necessarily to do with real terrorism at all (surely Spellberg isn’t an official spokesperson for extremists—or even for Muslims in general?), but rather people’s fear of terrorism.

  48. Stephanie said on 08.06.08 at 09:01 PM • [comment link]

    I wasn’t talking specifically to you about the ‘fatwa’ issue Stephanie (I get the urge to to spell that with too many ‘e’s because of Meyer) it’s just something that annoys me in general.

    Yeah, I totally got that, but since I didn’t actually know the piece of information, I was thanking you anyway.

    (Also, I am going to be seriously pissed if Stephenie Meyer manages to change the standard spelling of ‘Stephanie’ permanently.)

    How can you protest a book, other than not buying it, without calling for it not to be printed (or obviously harsher actions)? I guess organizing a boycott. Other suggestions? If you’re writing letters to the publisher, wouldn’t you be calling for it not to be printed?

  49. Imogen Howson said on 08.06.08 at 09:03 PM • [comment link]

    Darn. I wrote that before I read Barb’s comment. 

    But still, unless Spellberg is actually acting as a spokesperson for a terrorist organisation (which I presume she’s not), it’s not a terrorist threat.

    Just thought I’d belabor that point a little.  :-)

  50. Lauren Dane said on 08.06.08 at 09:03 PM • [comment link]

    How about if you don’t approve of it, you don’t read it? When is it suddenly acceptable to have people running around and censoring what others read and write because of what YOU believe? I don’t like it no matter who does it.

    I have no issues with people being offended by ideas they don’t like or agree with. But I do have issues when those people use threats to stop OTHERS from being exposed to those ideas.

    Certainly radical Islam is not alone in this. Conservative Christians did the same thing when Passion of the Christ came out (and another interesting corrollary is that most of the protesters hadn’t seen or read the material they tried to censor then either). The political spectrum from right to left has done it as well. It’s tiring in all guises.

    Your beliefs are just that, YOURS. Do not seek to force them on me.

  51. TarotByArwen said on 08.06.08 at 09:03 PM • [comment link]

    Spellberg is the problem here and not the book or the genre. She seems to have gotten her panties (probably white cotton granny) in a wad. Perhaps she is one of those who can not make the distinction between fiction and fact. Apparently she thinks fiction means “accurate historical annotations”.

    Or, the cynic in me wonders, maybe she has a book of her own on the same subject? (Agreeing with another cynic above me somewhere in the myriad of comments.)

  52. Christine said on 08.06.08 at 09:04 PM • [comment link]

    There is all this talk of this being censorship, but is it really censorship if the book can still be published through other sources? It’s not like the government is banning it from print or sale. Now, if she goes to other publishers and they don’t want to touch it with ten foot pole, it’s still not censorship, IMO. That comes closer to the book being blacklisted.

  53. Cat Marsters said on 08.06.08 at 09:07 PM • [comment link]

    My God, that’s some wonderful publicity.

  54. kirsten saell said on 08.06.08 at 09:10 PM • [comment link]

    And Salman Rushdie is a man writing Seriouis Literary Fiction [TM] and a Booker Prize winner. This lady is a) a woman b) I don’t quite recall her name even now and c) is writing genre fiction, and romance at that.

    So because she is a woman, and not well-known (*ahem* practically no one outside effete literary circles had heard of Rushdie before the Fatwa Bruhaha), and isn’t writing “big, important, capital “L” Literary books”, her right to free speech and freedom of expression is less than Rushdie’s?

    Niiice.

  55. Blue Angel said on 08.06.08 at 09:12 PM • [comment link]

    I think Spellberg was doing a humane act, maybe, by telling the publisher about her fears for them and for the author, if the book were published.  However,  she sided WITH the thought police when she contacted Muslim students, obviously, to alert them to this “blasphemy. ” What did she think they were going to do with this information?  Have a polite debate about freedom of speech vs. respect?  The woman should be fired for encouraging those agents who would destroy freedom of speech. 

    I wish the Muslim world would devote the same intensity to fighting terrorism that they do to fighting what they perceive as assaults on their religion.  It would go a LONG WAY to reassuring people that Islam IS a religion of peace if there were rallies, worldwide that burned the effigies of TERRORISTS.

  56. shewhohashope said on 08.06.08 at 09:14 PM • [comment link]

    (Also, I am going to be seriously pissed if Stephenie Meyer manages to change the standard spelling of ‘Stephanie’ permanently.)

    I think you’re in luck. Breaking Dawn apperars to universally reviled, and I’ve decided that I’m going to keep spelling Stephanie this no matter how the person in question’s parents have decided to flout societal convention.

    How can you protest a book, other than not buying it, without calling for it not to be printed (or obviously harsher actions)? I guess organizing a boycott. Other suggestions? If you’re writing letters to the publisher, wouldn’t you be calling for it not to be printed?

    That’s pretty much it. Mainly just make your objections public.


    And I’m not sure if Lauren Dane is referring to me (it seems unlikely) but I’ve already stated my position on this subject.

  57. shewhohashope said on 08.06.08 at 09:17 PM • [comment link]

    So because she is a woman, and not well-known (*ahem* practically no one outside effete literary circles had heard of Rushdie before the Fatwa Bruhaha), and isn’t writing “big, important, capital “L” Literary books”, her right to free speech and freedom of expression is less than Rushdie’s?

    Niiice.

    Now I’m not sure what you guys think of me.

    Was it any way not obvious that I was - not being sarcastic, exactly -  stating a truth that I don’t agree with?

  58. Barb Ferrer said on 08.06.08 at 09:19 PM • [comment link]

    I think Spellberg was doing a humane act, maybe, by telling the publisher about her fears for them and for the author, if the book were published.

    I’d be a lot more willing to believe this if the timeline of events as spelled out via the WSJ didn’t seem to indicate that she contacted the visiting professor before she contacted the publishing house.

  59. shewhohashope said on 08.06.08 at 09:19 PM • [comment link]

    I think Spellberg was doing a humane act, maybe, by telling the publisher about her fears for them and for the author, if the book were published.  However, she sided WITH the thought police when she contacted Muslim students, obviously, to alert them to this “blasphemy. “ What did she think they were going to do with this information?  Have a polite debate about freedom of speech vs. respect?  The woman should be fired for encouraging those agents who would destroy freedom of speech.

    STUDENTS. You place the word ‘Muslim’ in front of ‘Students’ and suddenly it’s Al Qaeda?

    I wish the Muslim world would devote the same intensity to fighting terrorism that they do to fighting what they perceive as assaults on their religion.  It would go a LONG WAY to reassuring people that Islam IS a religion of peace if there were rallies, worldwide that burned the effigies of TERRORISTS.

    Pfft.

    (I’ll probably have to clarify what I’m saying here at some point, but it’s going to take a while)

  60. Barb Ferrer said on 08.06.08 at 09:27 PM • [comment link]

    Spellman followed up the conversation with a letter from her attorney stating that Spellman would sue if her name were associated with the novel.

    Anyone else being hit with the irony that in all likelihood, her name forevermore will be linked with the novel?

    My husband also made the very astute observation of, “You know, if I’m Random House, I consider canceling her contract too because a) perceived conflict of interest and b) why would you want to do business with someone who’s just threatened to sue you?”

    I love that man.

  61. Kalen Hughes said on 08.06.08 at 09:29 PM • [comment link]

    Conservative Christians did the same thing when Passion of the Christ came out (and another interesting corollary is that most of the protesters hadn’t seen or read the material they tried to censor then either).

    I think you might be referring to The Last Temptation of Christ. Gibson’s Passion was the darling of Christian Conservatives (it was screened in mega churches all over the U.S.).

  62. RStewie said on 08.06.08 at 09:35 PM • [comment link]

    shewhohashope:
    I didn’t take your statement as sarcasm.  I thought you were serious.  It looks like I wasn’t the only one.  That’s one of the major problems with online communication.

    I didn’t comment on it, though, because perhaps you are more fundamental (hate that word) in your beliefs, and you believe that a woman’s literary work is not as important as a man’s, or that man in particular.

    Seeing as to how you are at this site, though…I’m not sure what I was thinking, because no way could I reconcile beliefs of that nature and surfing the web to smartbitches.com.  :)  Knee-jerk reaction, possibly, since I have met women that believe that way.

    spamword: appreared21…noooo…actually, appearing my full 30 today, and hot and tired, to boot.  but thanks for the compliment.

  63. SB Sarah said on 08.06.08 at 09:37 PM • [comment link]

    Passion of the Christ was vilified in varying levels of irate screeching by the Jewish community, as many of the images therein were considered anti-Semitic.

  64. kirsten saell said on 08.06.08 at 09:38 PM • [comment link]

    Was it any way not obvious that I was - not being sarcastic, exactly - stating a truth that I don’t agree with?

    If you were being obvious, you might have stated, 1) that you thought Rushdie’s publisher ought to have declined to publish his books, the same way Jones’ publisher has, or 2) that despite your objections to the subject matter of Ms. Jones’ book, you supported her right to freedom of expression.  You did neither.

    If you weren’t saying she had less rights than an award winning male writer of literary fiction, you should have m ade it clearer.

  65. Leah said on 08.06.08 at 09:42 PM • [comment link]

    Certainly radical Islam is not alone in this. Conservative Christians did the same thing when Passion of the Christ came out (and another interesting corrollary is that most of the protesters hadn’t seen or read the material they tried to censor then either). The political spectrum from right to left has done it as well. It’s tiring in all guises.

    I’m pretty sure you mean The Last Temptation of Christ, movie and book.

    I’m gonna out myself here as a conservative Christian.  TBH, that stuff (Dan Brown and Kazantzakis (sp?) didn’t bother me because, hey, truth is truth, no matter what a person may say, or write, or film, or whatever.  Besides, neither of those works seem all that irreverent to me.  I don’t see the problem with peaceful protests (signs, petitions), and boycotts.  I don’t see the problem with letters to the editor, or TV interviews in which people discuss how horrible the work in question is (so long as they read it).  It’s good to have a discussion of religious beliefs, esp. in our society, which sometimes needs a reminder.  It can be a good thing, really, for a religiously controversial work to come out—it gets everyone talking in my religious community, and generally inspires people to weed out sinful aspects of their lives, and resolve to try and keep themselves and their families more “separate from the world.”  But, speaking only for Christians—if we’re not happy with religious disrespect and immorality, then we need to get busier “working from the inside,” trying to bring others to Christ, rather than ranting and raving about a book or a movie.  Because if enough people commit their lives to God, then a lot of this stuff will disappear without our having to protest it.  IMHO.

    And it’s Barb for the win! Turns out Dr. Spellberg is the author of a feminist book about Aisha, wife of Mohammed. Jones read Spellberg’s book, liked it, and suggested Spellberg be asked for a quote.

    That, to me, is so telling. 


    spam filter: point 86….no, I think I’m done for now

  66. shewhohashope said on 08.06.08 at 09:44 PM • [comment link]

    I’m supposed to worry about the sensibilities of a group of people who murder daughters, sisters, wives and other FEMALE relatives because some asshole prick got his fucking honor bent out of shape? Who torture and mutilate women so they can’t enjoy sex?

    WHUT.

    I don’t know where to begin.

  67. Jo Bourne said on 08.06.08 at 09:47 PM • [comment link]

    And Salman Rushdie is a man writing Seriouis Literary Fiction [TM] and a Booker Prize winner. This lady is a) a woman b) I don’t quite recall her name even now and c) is writing genre fiction, and romance at that.


    As a
    (a) woman,
    (b) whose name you’ve never heard,  who is
    (c) writing ROMANCE-AT-THAT ... 

    I gotta say I’m not just delighted with the thought I deserve less free-speech protection than

    (a) a male, 
    (b) who has a name you are capable of remembering, and
    (c) is writing Terribly Important Literary Stuff.

    I do not approve of blackmail,
    or religions jockeying for special privileges,
    or giving power to oafs with rocks.

    If we allow thugs to squelch the publication of a
    ROMANCE-AT-THAT
    their demands will escalate till they reach some sort of writing you feel should not be censored. 
    Or possibly not.

  68. Leah said on 08.06.08 at 09:47 PM • [comment link]

    Was it any way not obvious that I was - not being sarcastic, exactly - stating a truth that I don’t agree with

    Nah, when you put “TM” after Serious Literary Fiction, I got you.  Thought it was funny, actually

  69. robinb said on 08.06.08 at 09:48 PM • [comment link]

    Am I the only one who thinks that this only makes her book more likely to sell when it does come out…..and it WILL come out.    You say you’re pulling it because of some vague “threat”  and everyone goes into an uproar and DEMANDS to see it published, etc, and then when it IS finally published it is a bestseller.  And nobody will give a damn whether it is well written or not. 

    Nah.  That is too cynical even for me.

  70. Elizabeth Wadsworth said on 08.06.08 at 09:49 PM • [comment link]

    This book just got publicity that couldn’t be bought. Dollars to donuts Random House “reconsiders” (assuming this wasn’t some kind of publicity grab in the first place). If they don’t they’re morons

    .

    Hah—that was my first thought too when I read the article!
    Free publicity for both writers—a “you stab my back, I’ll stab yours” kind of situation.  Me, cynical?  Nah.

  71. shewhohashope said on 08.06.08 at 09:49 PM • [comment link]

    I didn’t comment on it, though, because perhaps you are more fundamental (hate that word) in your beliefs, and you believe that a woman’s literary work is not as important as a man’s, or that man in particular.

    Maybe I should strive to be less ambiguous.

    I can see that you don’t mean to be rude, but consider how hurtful it is to constantly have people assume that you are extremely conservative (at best) and a crazy fundamentalist/terrorist (at worst) because of your faith.

    (and no-one else is boggling at the statement about muslims being an indistinguishable mass of murderers and crazies. No-one?)

  72. Lori said on 08.06.08 at 09:51 PM • [comment link]

    It’s true that there are people from every religion that get very upset when anyone writes about their history.  In terms of turning a sacred history into soft core pornography I thought of The Red Tent, which got a lot of undies in a major bunch.  The difference is, it got published.  I agree 100% with those who say that the solution to being offended by a book is simply not to read it, but I think the difference in reaction here is because people obviously fear angry Muslims in a way that they simply don’t fear angry Christians.  I think that’s unrealistic.

    Here in America we’ve never had the sort of violent protests that happened after the flap about the Danish cartoons.  For a whole bunch of reasons I won’t bore you with I don’t think that’s likely to change.  And if you look at recent history the average American not living in LA or NY has much more to fear from right wing “Christian” extremists, either of the lone nut variety or militia members, than they do from Islamic terrorists.  So I agree with the person who said this smacks of hysteria.

  73. Manda80 said on 08.06.08 at 09:52 PM • [comment link]

    I think you might be referring to The Last Temptation of Christ. Gibson’s Passion was the darling of Christian Conservatives (it was screened in mega churches all over the U.S.).

    For the most part yes.  But it is also extremely Catholic in imagery and many of the scenes are Catholic in origin.  There were some fundamentalists who disliked the movie because it was made by a Catholic.

    I’m Catholic myself.  I read the Da Vinci Code when it first came out, before the big brouhaha began.  It did offend me in some parts.  However, I can appreciate it as a work of fiction, that is meant to entertain.

  74. shewhohashope said on 08.06.08 at 09:54 PM • [comment link]

    Jo

    I assume you haven’t read my clarification, but why on earth am I reading smart bitches trashy books, unless I am in fact a woman of at least average (I hope) intelligence who loves romance novels?

    [And I remember your name perfectly well. It’s evident that false amnesia is not the comedic gold I thought it was. Except for Leah no-one agrees with me.]

  75. Barb Ferrer said on 08.06.08 at 09:56 PM • [comment link]

    This book just got publicity that couldn’t be bought. Dollars to donuts Random House “reconsiders” (assuming this wasn’t some kind of publicity grab in the first place). If they don’t they’re morons

    Considering the report stated that she already signed the termination agreement, reconsidering is going to involve a new contract and possibly going to auction against other houses who will no doubt want to grab the publicity for themselves.

    Very expensive proposition, that, especially since Jones will have been able to retain any moneys already paid to her as a “kill fee.”

  76. Anaquana said on 08.06.08 at 09:56 PM • [comment link]

    But, speaking only for Christians—if we’re not happy with religious disrespect and immorality, then we need to get busier “working from the inside,” trying to bring others to Christ, rather than ranting and raving about a book or a movie.  Because if enough people commit their lives to God, then a lot of this stuff will disappear without our having to protest it.  IMHO.

    I… uhhh… I really don’t know how to describe my reaction to your words without it turning into a diatribe.

    I have committed my life to God. However, my commitment is not to the Christian God. The idea that people seek to convert others just so they don’t have to listen to ideas that run counter to their own is extremely distasteful to me. I am secure enough in my religious beliefs that I don’t need to convert others or protest something that may be “blasphemous”.

    Hell, fiction writers use Gods that I worship all of the time in their books in ways that make me cringe, but I do not call for a boycott or protest. Heck, there are some books that have Pagan Gods as the villains that I personally enjoy very much because the book was well-written and entertaining.

  77. kirsten saell said on 08.06.08 at 09:57 PM • [comment link]

    TBH, that stuff (Dan Brown and Kazantzakis (sp?) didn’t bother me because, hey, truth is truth, no matter what a person may say, or write, or film, or whatever.  Besides, neither of those works seem all that irreverent to me.  I don’t see the problem with peaceful protests (signs, petitions), and boycotts.  I don’t see the problem with letters to the editor, or TV interviews in which people discuss how horrible the work in question is (so long as they read it).  It’s good to have a discussion of religious beliefs, esp. in our society, which sometimes needs a reminder.


    Leah, you make me smile.

  78. Tina C. said on 08.06.08 at 10:01 PM • [comment link]

    “I don’t have a problem with historical fiction. I do have a problem with the deliberate misinterpretation of history.

    Turns out Dr. Spellberg is the author of a feminist book about Aisha, wife of Mohammed.

    One point I find interesting is how she appears to conflate her views about Aisha (and presumably Mohammed) with Truth.  All histories, even autobiographies, are in some sense “historical fiction”. 

    For example, you can relate a historical fact, say, “William the Conqueror and his army invaded England in 1066”, but as soon as you attempt to chronical the reasons behind the invasion or what exactly happened once the army landed, you’ve left “factual” behind.  For one thing, no matter how objective you try to be, everyone brings their own personal biases to an issues.  This colors everything from what will or will not be considered as a valid source, but also the interpretation of the information the source provides.  Secondly, even eyewitnesses to an event can be inaccurate, prejudiced, ill-informed, or simply mistaken.  Therefore, all historians must go into a project with the intent of sifting through available material as objectively as possible, while always being aware of their own biases.  However, I would guess that many of you have seen instances where you’ve read something and the author’s preconceived notions are readily apparently to everyone but him/herself.  So while they may present their ideas with authority and with the personal belief that they are as close to the Truth (as they know it) as they can be, the truth is that all history is relative and therefore, in a sense, historical fiction.  It’s just that some histories are more fictional than others.

  79. KTG said on 08.06.08 at 10:01 PM • [comment link]

    shewhohashope you raise a good point with this statement:

    “(and no-one else is boggling at the statement about muslims being an indistinguishable mass of murderers and crazies. No-one?)”

    Yes, I read some of these comments and my mind did ‘boggle’. Sorry I didn’t speak up.

    Truth is I fear and speak out against intolerance in any form, and I responded first to what Sarah posted first and then misunderstood your comment.

  80. Jo Bourne said on 08.06.08 at 10:02 PM • [comment link]

    I do agree with you that publishers will be more apt to protect Very Serious Literary Works from censorship-by-oaf than Just-a-Romances. 

    I want to see this protection spread across even minor works.  (Though a $100K advance argues this is NOT a minor work.) 

    I think we are in agreement on this ... nu?

    And certainly I am equal opportunity in demanding that oafs of all religions and national stripes should be prevented from heaving bricks.

  81. robinb said on 08.06.08 at 10:04 PM • [comment link]

    (and no-one else is boggling at the statement about muslims being an indistinguishable mass of murderers and crazies. No-one?)

    It isn’t that I don’t find it mind boggling, I just find it too ridiculous to comment on.  Truly.  I have to believe they didn’t really mean that because to think they were serious is too much, even for me.

  82. Leah said on 08.06.08 at 10:07 PM • [comment link]

    [/quoteand no-one else is boggling at the statement about muslims being an indistinguishable mass of murderers and crazies. No-one?)

    You know that no one thinks that.  We all work with Muslims, have Muslim colleagues, doctors, professors, neighbors, whatever. I have a Muslim ex. We don’t think horrible things about them.  Well, not anymore about the ex, lol!  We have our own nutjobs out there, like Timothy McVeigh, Ted Kascynski (sp), etc.  But we know who they are.  They have names and faces. We can differentiate them from the rest of American society, because we live here and know how it works. When we see mobs protesting violently, and we are the target, or hear about suicide bombings against innocent people—Muslims, Jews, Iraqis, Saudi, whoever—and that’s the majority of what we hear about the Middle East—then it becomes easy to see that region with an unjustifiably negative bias. We don’t see all the positive, regular people there—because they just don’t get the press.  I’m sure we can do better.


    foot67…born in 1967.  Put my foot in my mouth pretty much every day

  83. shewhohashope said on 08.06.08 at 10:14 PM • [comment link]

    I’m going to make an attempt to stop refreshing this page, because it will obviously lead me to insanity, but I’d like to say that there is a major difference between the subjects of these analogies.

    I’m going to leave ‘being Scottish’ out of this because that is some next-level stuff happening right there. But as for ‘being Christian’?

    Christianity in Britain, as I here it, is nowhere near as pervasive as Christianity in the US. But even here it is everywhere. Sundays are generally holidays from school and work. I had Religious education lessons that were solely bible reading in primary school. I had to attend carol/hymn singing sessions three times a week. We have Christmas/Easter celebrations every year. The legal system is based on Christian morals. Everything is built on the assumption that people are quietly Christian. I have to turn up to class as usual/ go to my office job if and when I get one as usual. I have to try and work a prayer schedule around classes and on accasion I will still be booked so solid I have take a break while lessons are ongoing to fit it all in. I’m scheduled into classes when it is time to break my fast for Ramadan. I have to ask for time off for Eid, and on occasion can’t get it because of exams. I get complaints about having to take an extra long lunch break to go to the mosque, or get a private room to pray in when I have a summer job. I get told outright that I haven’t gotten jobs because I wear a headscarf. I have had my luggage searched because people thought I looked suspicious. I have been threatened and harassed on the street for being a Muslim.

    In this thread I’ve been assumed to be alternately a misogynist and a hater of free speech despite statements to the contrary.

    There is no equivalence whatsoever between something being seen as a threat/insult by Christians and by Muslims.

  84. DS said on 08.06.08 at 10:15 PM • [comment link]

    *Face/Desk*

    Read a couple of blogs to try to pick up some perspective and it looks like this is being whipped into another liberal (Spellburg received a degree from Columbia therefore must be a liberal), conservative fit instead of addressing the, I think, important issues being raised.

    And I even have my concerns about the WSJ’s reporting slant since it was bought by Murdoch.

  85. Lauren Dane said on 08.06.08 at 10:17 PM • [comment link]

    Yes, Last Temptation of Christ (Passion was the name of the incredible soundtrack Peter Gabriel did for it, sorry I conflated!) - a fabulous book and also I movie I was nearly unable to go to because of picketers shoving at me, screaming in my face, calling me names and making every attempt to stop ME from viewing a movie I have every right to see.

    I’m a Christian too so I don’t really like anyone saying they’re “speaking for Christians” because well, there are millions upon millions of Christians and I personally found the Last Temptation of Christ to be a beautiful, faith affirming movie and not offensive in the least. But I believe others have a right to see it differently and to say so as long as they’re not impeding me.

    I’ve done my share of picketing over lots of things. But no one tells me what I can see and read but me and your rights end where mine begin. Don’t block my way to “object” to something I know for a fact 98% of those picketers hadn’t even read or seen.

    This is not about one religion or one group being worse than others. This is about intolerance in the extreme.

  86. Barb Ferrer said on 08.06.08 at 10:19 PM • [comment link]

    I’ve done my share of picketing over lots of things. But no one tells me what I can see and read but me and your rights end where mine begin. Don’t block my way to “object” to something I know for a fact 98% of those picketers hadn’t even read or seen.

    This is not about one religion or one group being worse than others. This is about intolerance in the extreme.

    *points up at what Lauren said*

    Yep, this.

  87. shewhohashope said on 08.06.08 at 10:22 PM • [comment link]

    It isn’t that I don’t find it mind boggling, I just find it too ridiculous to comment on.  Truly.  I have to believe they didn’t really mean that because to think they were serious is too much, even for me.

    Well obviously (obviously) you get less anti-Muslim nonsense directed at you than me, so you can be less cynical than I am.

    You know that no one thinks that.  We all work with Muslims, have Muslim colleagues, doctors, professors, neighbors, whatever. I have a Muslim ex. We don’t think horrible things about them.  Well, not anymore about the ex, lol!  We have our own nutjobs out there, like Timothy McVeigh, Ted Kascynski (sp), etc.  But we know who they are.  They have names and faces. We can differentiate them from the rest of American society, because we live here and know how it works. When we see mobs protesting violently, and we are the target, or hear about suicide bombings against innocent people—Muslims, Jews, Iraqis, Saudi, whoever—and that’s the majority of what we hear about the Middle East—then it becomes easy to see that region with an unjustifiably negative bias. We don’t see all the positive, regular people there—because they just don’t get the press.  I’m sure we can do better.

    So… you’re saying that representation of Arabs/Muslims (often used as synonyms - for the record, I’m not an arab) lead to Americans (who are non Muslim/non Arabs) holding negative views about them.

    How does this jive with people not actually believing the negative stereotypes that the woman (or man) who boggled my mind mentioned?

    Or do you mean only Middle Eastern Muslims are seen negatively?

  88. Popin said on 08.06.08 at 10:24 PM • [comment link]

    I’m supposed to worry about the sensibilities of a group of people who murder daughters, sisters, wives and other FEMALE relatives because some asshole prick got his fucking honor bent out of shape? Who torture and mutilate women so they can’t enjoy sex?

    My lady bits are in perfect condition actually, so I’m not sure where you are going with this.

  89. Leah said on 08.06.08 at 10:30 PM • [comment link]

    I have committed my life to God. However, my commitment is not to the Christian God. The idea that people seek to convert others just so they don’t have to listen to ideas that run counter to their own is extremely distasteful to me.

    Sorry I keep messing up the quotes.  That’s not really what it’s about.  Christians should listen to all sorts of ideas. Religion should not close one’s mind.  .  But both Christianity and Islam are proselytizing religions, and my point was, that if we think we are right, then we should put our basic message out there, rather than spending our time yelling about a movie or something, because if the Bible (or the Qu’ran) has merit, then it should be allowed to speak. Me flapping my jaws about Mel Gibson or something is just a distraction from what I should be doing—that is, serving my fellow man regardless of faith, and teaching the Gospel to those who want to listen.

  90. LJ said on 08.06.08 at 10:32 PM • [comment link]

    (and no-one else is boggling at the statement about muslims being an indistinguishable mass of murderers and crazies. No-one?)

    Just read this thread- yes, I’m boggling. Boggling severely. What is it with Islam + Protest = Terrorism? Is this an American thing? Because I found some of the reactions much more shocking than the issue itself.

    I’m not in favour of censorship, but I think that there is a difference between being controversial and being offensive. And if Random House decided that the book was offensive, then they have an absolute right to take the loss and not publish it.
    And if Spellberg, as an expert in her field, was offended by a book given to her to review, she had a right to say so, and even a right to share her negative reaction with a colleague, or marshal protest against publication.

    I hope that eventually a Godwin’s Law comes into effect for Islam and terrorism. I think what’s out of whack here is not the action of cancelling publication, but the whole TERRISTS CANT HAV MA FREEDOM OF TEH SPEECH reaction.

  91. Fae Sutherland said on 08.06.08 at 10:33 PM • [comment link]

    I’m pretty sure you mean The Last Temptation of Christ, movie and book.

    No, pretty sure she meant Passion of the Christ.  Big scandalous Mel Gibson directed box office flop with James Caviezel as a vaguely homo-erotic Jesus?

    Spaminator word: money23…pretty sure Mel made more that $23 on that flick, despite the flop.

  92. Tasha said on 08.06.08 at 10:37 PM • [comment link]

    I’m supposed to worry about the sensibilities of a group of people who murder daughters, sisters, wives and other FEMALE relatives because some asshole prick got his fucking honor bent out of shape? Who torture and mutilate women so they can’t enjoy sex?

    FGM (female genital mutilation) is a cultural, not a religious practice. It’s a subtle but extremely important difference.

  93. Lori said on 08.06.08 at 10:38 PM • [comment link]

    and no-one else is boggling at the statement about muslims being an indistinguishable mass of murderers and crazies. No-one?

    The 2nd part of my earlier comment was meant in part to point out that I disagree my position on the issue, I was just trying to disagree in a really polite way.  I tend to be rather rant-y by nature and I’m a Master’s candidate in US Foreign Policy/Security Studies so this topic has the potential to invoke a bit of a tirade, which helps no one.  Apparently I over compensated & was too subtle.

    For the record, anything that even approaches Muslim = Arab, Muslim = hates women or Muslim = terrorist is inaccurate and really, seriously detrimental, both in terms of how we as individuals view & treat each other and in terms of American policy.

  94. Fae Sutherland said on 08.06.08 at 10:39 PM • [comment link]

    my bad, I see she was mistaken.  *bows out again*

  95. TarotByArwen said on 08.06.08 at 10:39 PM • [comment link]

    I hope that eventually a Godwin’s Law comes into effect for Islam and terrorism. I think what’s out of whack here is not the action of cancelling publication, but the whole TERRISTS CANT HAV MA FREEDOM OF TEH SPEECH reaction.

    NAZI!

    Sorry, someone had to say it.

    This is a very interesting social experiment in a way. If you read the article

    After Ms. Spellberg had a conversation with an editor at Knopf, an imprint of Random House with whom Spellberg has a book contract, alarm was raised within the company that the book, the author, and the employees of the publisher could be the victims of “widespread violence.”

    Spellberg is the one who started this fuss. Personally, I’d like to see the

    seven-point strategy to ensure ‘the writer withdraws this book from the stores and apologise all the muslims across the world.’”

    Does anyone know if this exists? In searching I found http://www.jewishblogging.com/blog.php?bid=153583 which has some interesting quotes including

    But Ms. Spellberg wasn’t a fan of Ms. Jones’s book. On April 30, Shahed Amanullah, a guest lecturer in Ms. Spellberg’s classes and the editor of a popular Muslim Web site, got a frantic call from her. “She was upset,” Mr. Amanullah recalls. He says Ms. Spellberg told him the novel “made fun of Muslims and their history,” and asked him to warn Muslims.

    Spam word? soviet96 which really is funny considering Godwin’s Law etc.

  96. Susan said on 08.06.08 at 10:41 PM • [comment link]

    The folks at Random House should have stood by their author.

    We live in an age of fear and repression. Learning that the world’s largest publishing conglomerate was scared away from publshing this book disappoints me.

    Shewhohashope, I recognized your sarcasm, but it was subtle, and subtlety can be a tough thing to pick up in the message board environment, especially when people are reading quickly and responding even more quickly.

  97. Barb Ferrer said on 08.06.08 at 10:42 PM • [comment link]

    And if Random House decided that the book was offensive, then they have an absolute right to take the loss and not publish it.

    RH didn’t make the decision to pull the book based on the fact that it was potentially offensive—puh-leez, as if that would be the sole basis for pulling a book from a pub schedule.  Nope, they pulled it based on the fact that they felt they had received threats to the safety of their company and employees based on what Spellberg told them and what she had told her colleague who then spread the word among the academic and student community.

    I kind of find it difficult to believe that even some idle “We think this book sux and you shouldn’t publish it,” protesting from student groups would be enough, unless accompanied by some sort of substantial threat.  I’m not saying violence, but certainly, it had to be something fairly big to get Random House—big, big corporation with lots of money, to pull back and cut their losses.

  98. JenB said on 08.06.08 at 10:47 PM • [comment link]

    “I don’t have a problem with historical fiction. I do have a problem with the deliberate misinterpretation of history. You can’t play with a sacred history and turn it into soft core pornography.”

    I wonder what this crazy biatch would think about Michael Schiefelbein’s VAMPIRE series, in which a gay male vampire is in love with Jesus.

    Or all the PNR and UF these days starring angels and demons.

    Gawd.  Two of the things I hate the most in today’s world: fundamentalism and political correctness at the same fucking time.  I didn’t even think those two were possible together.  I think the lady at least deserves props for combining two conflicting philosophies so effectively.

  99. shewhohashope said on 08.06.08 at 10:48 PM • [comment link]

    I hope that eventually a Godwin’s Law comes into effect for Islam and terrorism. I think what’s out of whack here is not the action of cancelling publication, but the whole TERRISTS CANT HAV MA FREEDOM OF TEH SPEECH reaction.

    Screw the Iranian government. Let’s get married!

  100. Sheryl Nantus said on 08.06.08 at 10:52 PM • [comment link]

    It scares me for the future of our society when we start pre-banning books based on what they *might* cause people to think. Once it starts, where does it stop?

  101. Imogen Howson said on 08.06.08 at 10:53 PM • [comment link]

    and no-one else is boggling at the statement about muslims being an indistinguishable mass of murderers and crazies. No-one?

    I am.  And…ugh…what to say.  I’m up for an addendum to Godwin’s Law.

    And I’ll stick with what I said (much) higher up.  I don’t think this issue is to do with either ‘political correctness’ or terrorist threat.  I think it’s to do with the hysteria people experience when they hear the words ‘Muslim’ and ‘protest’.

  102. Leah said on 08.06.08 at 10:57 PM • [comment link]

    So… you’re saying that representation of Arabs/Muslims (often used as synonyms - for the record, I’m not an arab) lead to

    Americans (who are non Muslim/non Arabs) holding negative views about them.

    How does this jive with people not actually believing the negative stereotypes that the woman (or man) who boggled my mind mentioned?

    Or do you mean only Middle Eastern Muslims are seen negatively?

    I dont’ mean to offend anyone on here, Muslim, pagan, Christian, Jew, or otherwise.

    I mean simply that people only can go by the information they have.  It’s a human thing, not an American, or British, or Muslim or Norwegian or whatever.  I remember when I was dating Nadir, he had some Arabic publications that said some truly bizarre things about Israel.  At least they seemed bizarre to me.  To him, not so much.  Even if he didn’t believe them entirely, they did have emotional resonance for him that they did not for me.  But it made me realize that people in other nations can have skewed views of the US, too, if all the information they get is inaccurate.  We should all be more skeptical, and rise above whatever paranoia is out there.  None of us are immune to it.  And it needs to be challenged when it does appear, no matter who is involved.
    I’m sorry, btw, about the prejudices you have encountered.  I thought really, that the UK was far more secular than we are. But it’s not a national thing, is it?  We all need to be more tolerant of each other. 

    I hope this makes sense.  If it doesn’t blame the 3 little kids who are hanging on me screaming for supper.  Who do they think I am?  Their mother?  lol!

  103. JenB said on 08.06.08 at 10:57 PM • [comment link]

    It scares me for the future of our society when we start pre-banning books based on what they *might* cause people to think. Once it starts, where does it stop?

    Two fun stories on this subject:

    Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

    Minority Report by Philip K. Dick

  104. Barb Ferrer said on 08.06.08 at 10:57 PM • [comment link]

    I don’t think this issue is to do with either ‘political correctness’ or terrorist threat.  I think it’s to do with the hysteria people experience when they hear the words ‘Muslim’ and ‘protest’.

    Ah, but Imogen, the key here is that that particular flavor of hysteria was not only fanned, but downright blown into a giant-ass bonfire by an expert in the religion, history, and culture.  I agree with those who’ve said that Random House’s reaction was wrong, that they should have stood by their author, but it was another one of their authors feeding them the information in such a way that it incited the hysteria and gross overreaction.

    You’d think Spellberg would’ve known better.  Or, perhaps she did?  Who knows.

  105. Leah said on 08.06.08 at 11:03 PM • [comment link]

    I’m stupid (yeah, I know).  What is Godwin’s law?

  106. TarotByArwen said on 08.06.08 at 11:06 PM • [comment link]

    Not stupid at all. Probably just been able to avoid the many flame wars of “teh interwebz.”

    Godwin’s Law (also known as Godwin’s Rule of Nazi Analogies)[1] is an adage formulated by Mike Godwin in 1990. The law states:[2][3]

    “As a Usenet discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches one.”

    Godwin’s Law is often cited in online discussions as a caution against the use of inflammatory rhetoric or exaggerated comparisons, and is often conflated with fallacious arguments of the reductio ad Hitlerum form.

    The rule does not make any statement whether any particular reference or comparison to Hitler or the Nazis might be appropriate, but only asserts that one arising is increasingly probable. It is precisely because such a comparison or reference may sometimes be appropriate, Godwin has argued[4] that overuse of Nazi and Hitler comparisons should be avoided, because it robs the valid comparisons of their impact. Although in one of its early forms Godwin’s Law referred specifically to Usenet newsgroup discussions,[5] the law is now applied to any threaded online discussion: electronic mailing lists, message boards, chat rooms, and more recently blog comment threads and wiki talk pages.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin’s_law

  107. Imogen Howson said on 08.06.08 at 11:07 PM • [comment link]

    You’d think Spellberg would’ve known better.  Or, perhaps she did?  Who knows.

    I’m kind of assuming she’s the hysterical one, actually!

    Oh and Godwin’s Law states that the first person to reference Hitler or Nazis in an argument automatically loses.  (As in, “What, you advocate age-banding for books?  That’s censorship.  That’s like book-burning.  That’s what Hitler did!  You’re a Nazi!”)  Even if the rest of their argument made sense.  :-)

  108. LJ said on 08.06.08 at 11:10 PM • [comment link]

    Once it starts, where does it stop?

    I hate the slippery slope argument more than anything else except Fox News and the fact that Sean Bean will never love me.

    This may have been Random House cowering in fear before the mighty wrath of radical Islam, albeit in the unlikely guise of a feminist Middle Eastern studies professor and a listserv group. Or it may have been Random House deciding that publishing a book that a large section of the population might find pointlessly offensive wasn’t where it wanted to go with its public image.

    Either way, this is not a lead-in to Orwellian dystopia. Random House declined to publish the book, and returned the rights. The author is free to market it elsewhere. If RH had shown the manuscript to an expert before accepting it, and declined it for the exact same reason, this would be an non-issue.
    This is not censorship. This book has not been banned, burnt, or supressed. A publishing house has decided not to publish it.

    On a side note, I feel that all forms of medical surgery should be banned. If we let surgeons cut people up, where will it end? Before you know it, they’ll be waylaying us in alleys and performing unneccesary appendectomies on anyone who can’t get away. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.

  109. Steph said on 08.06.08 at 11:11 PM • [comment link]

    I think I know why this is getting out of hand.  I know the Muslims here feel as if general society picks on them.  We develop stereotypes based on things we see, read, and hear.  We read the story about the Australian Muslim leader that compared uncovered women to meat being left out.  We see the video of the Muslim girl stoned to death for caring for a boy that wasn’t of her religion.  We see the girls covered from head to toe in scorching heat while the boys don’t have to wear nearly as much crap. (That is in the US) We see things that we would never understand or tolerate in our households.  We see the Muslims screaming that they are a religion of peace while sects bomb places. If RH has overreacted, then there are reasons for it.  We hear stories about The Prophen taking a bride at 6 and taking her taking her at 9.  Let’s not forget the cartoon episode.  These are the versions we are inundated with.  We need more positives.

    I have friends that are Muslims.  They are good people.  I don’t associate them with the negatives but that is because they are an Americanized version.  They don’t look down on me for being me and I don’t look down on them for being them. When we have a pot luck, I don’t fix pork.  That’s about it.

    I asked a male friend why didn’t the head of the religious communities stand up and say something about the bad.  I know Muslims aren’t evil but others need to.  He says it wouldn’t get as much press.  I don’t know if that’s true.  I know it would help.  We need more Muslims to stand up and say when things aren’t right.  I don’t think we would worry as much when a fury grew over cartoons or fiction.  I also think as women, no matter the religion, we should defend each other.  I don’t believe freaking out over a book was called for.  A polite letter would’ve been more effective and less worrisome.  JMHO.

  110. Imogen Howson said on 08.06.08 at 11:12 PM • [comment link]

    Oh, okay, I’m wrong.  I checked Wikipedia.  Apparently what I know as Godwin’s Law is just a corollary to the original Law that TarotbyArwen references. 

    new82 82 new laws made from the original…

  111. Teddypig said on 08.06.08 at 11:12 PM • [comment link]

    Note to self: Write Prophet Muhammad Porn for instant notoriety.

  112. Teddypig said on 08.06.08 at 11:15 PM • [comment link]

    Step 2: Send Prophet Muhammad Porn to UT Professor Denise Spellberg in care of “Warn all Muslims”

  113. Susan said on 08.06.08 at 11:16 PM • [comment link]

    The Wall Street Journal Op-ed writer said in her piece, “This saga upsets me as a Muslim—and as a writer who believes that fiction can bring Islamic history to life in a uniquely captivating and humanizing way.”

    That’s what I find most sad about this episode.

    Jewish and Christian figures have been explored in fiction, and especially in the past five years, heavily in women’s fiction. Having a book on an historical Muslim woman could help many of us who are not very familiar with Islam come into it in a non-threatening way. I’m not saying that we should learn our history from fiction; rather, that as a reader, I have often learned about a historical event or person through fiction and then gone on to more authoritative sources to learn the real facts and scholarly interpretations of those events and people.

    Shame on Professor Spellberg for silencing a fellow author. If she truly finds this novel offensive, she could have discredited it by writing a thougtful article refuting it and allowed us (the readers) to judge for ourselves the worthiness of this particular fictional work.

  114. JenB said on 08.06.08 at 11:18 PM • [comment link]

    So that takes care of the Muhammed porn…Schiefelbein wrote the Jesus porn…The L Word showed a Mary Magdalene porno…Meljean Brook did the angels and demons…who does that leave out?  Gandhi?  Buddha?

    Abraham would be a good one.  You could piss off the Christians, the Muslims, and the Jews all in one book.

  115. Anaquana said on 08.06.08 at 11:19 PM • [comment link]

    From the WSJ article

    Thomas Perry, deputy publisher at Random House Publishing Group, said that it “disturbs us that we feel we cannot publish it right now.” He said that after sending out advance copies of the novel, the company received “from credible and unrelated sources, cautionary advice not only that the publication of this book might be offensive to some in the Muslim community, but also that it could incite acts of violence by a small, radical segment.”

    After consulting security experts and Islam scholars, Mr. Perry said the company decided “to postpone publication for the safety of the author, employees of Random House, booksellers and anyone else who would be involved in distribution and sale of the novel.”

    They did not cancel the book because they found it offensive. They canceled the book because they were afraid for people’s safety due to possible “acts of violence”.

  116. TarotByArwen said on 08.06.08 at 11:20 PM • [comment link]

    who does that leave out?  Gandhi?  Buddha?

    I just had the most interesting visual of Ben Kingsley…...


    voice41… I should be writing and working on my voice instead of leaving 41 comments? Dang psychic spaminator

  117. TarotByArwen said on 08.06.08 at 11:22 PM • [comment link]

    They did not cancel the book because they found it offensive. They canceled the book because they were afraid for people’s safety due to possible “acts of violence”.

    Honestly, it is more worrisome to me that they canceled out of some unfounded fear. This, to me, smacks more of ethnic hatred than finding the book offensive.

    Are we Americans truly that scared of the more violent sects of the Muslim faith? I have Muslim friends who tell me I should be, but should I?

    Course64. Of course?

  118. JenB said on 08.06.08 at 11:23 PM • [comment link]

    Step 2: Send Prophet Muhammad Porn to UT Professor Denise Spellberg in care of “Warn all Muslims”

    I’m only an hour from UT.  I could deliver it for you.  Maybe with a box of Lisabea’s S&M;gingerbread men.

  119. Lori said on 08.06.08 at 11:23 PM • [comment link]

    We develop stereotypes based on things we see, read, and hear.

    A huge part of the problem is that we so rarely ask enough questions about why we’re being presented with a particular set of images unless those images strike us as being an inaccurate representation of ourselves or our loved ones.  As Leah said, we all need to challenge those images much more often.

  120. Susan said on 08.06.08 at 11:24 PM • [comment link]

    Abraham porn has already been written: “Sarah: A Novel (Canaan Trilogy)” by Marek Halter

  121. JenB said on 08.06.08 at 11:25 PM • [comment link]

    Abraham porn has already been written: “Sarah: A Novel (Canaan Trilogy)” by Marek Halter

    Crap.  I guess I’ll scrap my rough draft then.

    captcha: zebra69…heh

  122. Ziggy said on 08.06.08 at 11:30 PM • [comment link]

    Wow, I don’t know whether to find this funny or offensive. Funny because - “oh no, we’ve offended the Muslims! we’d better take steps right away, you know what they’re like. Bomb you soon as look at you”. And offensive because I’m a Muslim, and I hate the idea of this book. But that’s okay. It’s just me. I’m not saying I’m going to BOMB anyone to express my outrage. I think, though, that we should be allowed to express our anger. Freedom of speech and all that. Bibi Aisha (r) and the Prophet (pbuh) are real people to me and to many, many people; and you don’t want to read light historical fiction about real people, people who are important to you. You don’t want to see them misrepresented. The genre - serious literature or light romance - doesn’t matter. It is disrespectful, the same way that The Da Vinci Code is disrespectful. (The DVC is also terrible crap.)

    I’m rambling here, sorry. I’m just trying to explain why the idea of a book like this is so hurtful. So, I don’t want it to be published. That doesn’t mean I think it shouldn’t be. Everything should be. Bad, hurtful, offensive books have been published before this.

  123. Leah said on 08.06.08 at 11:31 PM • [comment link]

    Hmmm…my post?  Where did it go?
    My husband just came in and I told him about all this.  He wondered if, when you send out your book to be blurbbed, there is a confidentiality agreement involved?  And if this author cannot sell her book elsewhere (can’t envision that, but still), can she sue Spellburg for hurting her career?  Of course, she can sue for anything, but would it have merit in court?

    Oh, and thanks for the info on Godwin’s law.  So hilarious—and so true!

  124. Joanne Renaud said on 08.06.08 at 11:33 PM • [comment link]

    This is really a fascinating topic!  Like the rest of you, I think Spellberg’s behavior is deplorable, and I am extremely interested in reading “Jewel of Medina” now.  It’s true, you really can’t buy publicity like this.  I hope Jones finds a new publisher ASAP and she makes lots of money; I will make sure to show up at her book signing and buy a signed copy. 

    By the way, you guys should check out Sherry Jones’ own blog, and drop her a suppportive note.

  125. Susan said on 08.06.08 at 11:41 PM • [comment link]

    Leah, I’ve worked in book publishing for more than a dozen years and never sent a confidentiality agreement to someone from whom I’m requesting a blurb. To my knowledge, it’s not common, if ever done. What publishers do say is that the material itself is not for (re)sale (that’s usually printed on the ARC or the ms front page) and that it shouldn’t be quoted without verfiying final text with the publisher as it may receive further edits between the ARC and the final book. If you’re sending a book to be vetted by an expert for one reason or another (check for historical accuracy, potential legal issues, etc.), there’s an agreement that usually signed—for the work being done—but I’ve never seen one with a confidentiality clause.

  126. kirsten saell said on 08.06.08 at 11:41 PM • [comment link]

    We need more Muslims to stand up and say when things aren’t right.  I don’t think we would worry as much when a fury grew over cartoons or fiction.

    Speaking of the Last Temptation of Christ, IIRC, there were a buttload of moderate people of Christian background who spoke up in favor of people’s right to see that movie.

    I don’t think Muslims who stand up and speak out against the extremists in their religion won’t get any press. I think perhaps they’re afraid they will. All it takes is one lunatic with an ounce of power (political, physical, whatever) to mess things up for everyone, because the lunatics are prepared to do anything, including die, for their cause, and the rest of us moderates just want to duck and cover until the shooting stops.

    We all need to just stop ducking and covering, even if it puts us at risk.

    Honestly, it is more worrisome to me that they canceled out of some unfounded fear.

    How do you know the fear is unfounded? Perhaps they received a credible threat from an extremist organization. All they said was “credible and unrelated sources”. That would imply more people contacted them regarding this than Ms. Spellberg.

  127. TarotByArwen said on 08.06.08 at 11:47 PM • [comment link]

    you don’t want to read light historical fiction about real people, people who are important to you.

    Correction. You may not want to, but I certainly do. One of my favorite books is The Moon Beneath Her Feet by Claudia Kinstler which is about a priestess of Ishtar, Mary aka the whore Mary Magdalene, and a priest of Judaism, Yeshua aka Jesus. It is a fascinating look at what might have happened and how those two characters might have interacted.

    life45 Apparently I’m gonna do 45- Life for this.

  128. TarotByArwen said on 08.06.08 at 11:48 PM • [comment link]

    Claudia Kinstler

    should be Clysta Kinstler. I knew I should have looked that up first.

    remember22… now this thing is just mocking me!

  129. LJ said on 08.06.08 at 11:48 PM • [comment link]

    Like the rest of you, I think Spellberg’s behavior is deplorable

    Maybe like “most of the rest of you”. I hope the book comes out, too, but mainly because I’d like to see a wider dialogue on whether the book is truly ugly or stupid.

    But I don’t see anything deplorable in Spellberg’s behaviour. She had concerns and she shared them. She’s allowed to. I didn’t get the impression that she was fomenting racial hatred or supporting terrorism or condoning violence.

    What’s deplorable about her conduct?

  130. kirsten saell said on 08.06.08 at 11:51 PM • [comment link]

    you don’t want to read light historical fiction about real people, people who are important to you.

    I love to read historical fiction about any and every culture or religion. Even those that I hold in higher personal regard than others.

    The whole taking offense at every little thing, from cartoons to historical romance novels (a novel, not a purported biography, ffs) makes me wonder how weak a person’s faith must be that any and every opposing POV is seen as offensive or blasphemy.

  131. TarotByArwen said on 08.06.08 at 11:52 PM • [comment link]

    How do you know the fear is unfounded? Perhaps they received a credible threat from an extremist organization. All they said was “credible and unrelated sources”. That would imply more people contacted them regarding this than Ms. Spellberg.

    My extrapolation is that they reacted to threats. I have a typically “American” reaction in that I do not think you should react to being bullied (although it’s a whole ‘nother discussion about America’s own bullying tactics). Therefore, to me, I believe the fear to be unfounded because of the “other people said so too” factor in this. I have been reading other sources for this story as much as I can find as well.

  132. kirsten saell said on 08.06.08 at 11:54 PM • [comment link]

    What’s deplorable about her conduct?

    As an “expert” on Middle Eastern studies, one would hope she could predict the results of her going to a colleague who was a) a Muslim, and b) editor of a religious/political website with her concerns. If she was not interested in stirring up a shitstorm, she would have quietly gone to the publisher and expressed her concerns to them.

  133. JenB said on 08.06.08 at 11:55 PM • [comment link]

    What’s deplorable about her conduct?

    I think many are tired of people like Spellberg creating mass hysteria over things that would probably amount to non-issues if left alone.

    Who decided that the American people aren’t strong enough to handle “offensive” issues as rational adults?  Since when did everything have to be monitored by sociologists and special interest groups?

  134. Gwen Mitchell said on 08.06.08 at 11:58 PM • [comment link]

    [quote=Susan]The Wall Street Journal Op-ed writer said in her piece, “This saga upsets me as a Muslim—and as a writer who believes that fiction can bring Islamic history to life in a uniquely captivating and humanizing way.”

    That’s what I find most sad about this episode.

    Jewish and Christian figures have been explored in fiction, and especially in the past five years, heavily in women’s fiction. Having a book on an historical Muslim woman could help many of us who are not very familiar with Islam come into it in a non-threatening way. I’m not saying that we should learn our history from fiction; rather, that as a reader, I have often learned about a historical event or person through fiction and then gone on to more authoritative sources to learn the real facts and scholarly interpretations of those events and people.

    Thank you!  That’s a very good point. 

    My panties aren’t twisting as a result of whether the threat Random House perceived is real, imagined, paranoid, or whatever.  To me, it’s more the idea that a handful of people can point a finger and completely shut-down a piece of fiction that is well within its rights to be published, distributed and read. 

    I just hate the whole idea of that sort of censorship.  Though, I’m not directly worried in this case.  Even if RH doesn’t reconsider, she’ll surely find someone with the guts to take the story on.

  135. Barb Ferrer said on 08.06.08 at 11:58 PM • [comment link]

    What’s deplorable about her conduct?

    Hmm…  there’s the part where she not only told a colleague how horrible the book was:

    On April 30, Shahed Amanullah, a guest lecturer in Ms. Spellberg’s classes and the editor of a popular Muslim Web site, got a frantic call from her. “She was upset,” Mr. Amanullah recalls. He says Ms. Spellberg told him the novel “made fun of Muslims and their history,” and asked him to warn Muslims.

    I like the frantic call and warning parts, especially.  This does not smack of a person who’s simply saying, “Wow, this book was bad AND historically inaccurate.”

    Then there was this bit:

    Meanwhile back in New York City, Jane Garrett, an editor at Random House’s Knopf imprint, dispatched an email on May 1 to Knopf executives, telling them she got a phone call the evening before from Ms. Spellberg (who happens to be under contract with Knopf to write “Thomas Jefferson’s Qur’an.”)

    “She thinks there is a very real possibility of major danger for the building and staff and widespread violence,” Ms. Garrett wrote. “Denise says it is ‘a declaration of war . . . explosive stuff . . . a national security issue.’ Thinks it will be far more controversial than the satanic verses and the Danish cartoons. Does not know if the author and Ballantine folks are clueless or calculating, but thinks the book should be withdrawn ASAP.”

    Dr. Spellberg was mighty busy on the evening of April 30th, no?  And one might question that there’s a bit of conflict of interest going on.

    And added to that, the threat of the lawsuit against her own publisher.

    She did not, in my personal opinion, behave in the way an academic who’s a purported expert in her field, should behave.  She did not behave in a manner that’s becoming to an author.  There’s just so much wrong about how she behaved that it leaves me quite boggled.  But that’s just me.

    Sherry Jones could’ve been writing a comprehensive sexual saga based on Ralph the Head of Sea Cabbage’s history and if someone had behaved in the manner that Denise Spellberg had in trying to keep it from being published, I’d be this annoyed.

  136. shewhohashope said on 08.07.08 at 12:01 AM • [comment link]

    Here is a link gfor all the people who think that Muslims aren’t condemning terrorism.

    And really who do you think gets more press? The crazy guy with the hook, or the reasonable people who take a stand to say that killing people is not nice?

    It’s sort of a man bites dog scenario.

  137. TarotByArwen said on 08.07.08 at 12:02 AM • [comment link]

    a comprehensive sexual saga based on Ralph the Head of Sea Cabbage’s history

    On behalf of sea cabbages everywhere, I’m offended. I will be alerting Sal ad Spin Er to let his list know of your flagrant attack on all cabbages everywhere.

    BTW? You stink and your dress was ugly.

    :D

    game38… now I KNOW this thing is mocking me.

  138. Kalen Hughes said on 08.07.08 at 12:06 AM • [comment link]

    I’m a Muslim, and I hate the idea of this book. But that’s okay. It’s just me. I’m not saying I’m going to BOMB anyone to express my outrage. I think, though, that we should be allowed to express our anger. Freedom of speech and all that. Bibi Aisha (r) and the Prophet (pbuh) are real people to me and to many, many people; and you don’t want to read light historical fiction about real people, people who are important to you.

    But by this standard all historical fiction is pretty much verboten, since somewhere, someone is likely to feel this way about the characters you’ve chosen to write about (god knows as a Native American I find those Sweet Savage Love books by Cassie Edwards and her ilk offensive, but I vote with my wallet by avoiding them like the plague). Same goes for settings or plots. If no one could write (or would publish) anything that might upset anyone, anywhere, that would leave us with zero fiction (cause something about every work of fiction offends some group; take a peek at a list of banned/challenged books if you don’t believe me).

  139. Popin said on 08.07.08 at 12:10 AM • [comment link]

    Jewish and Christian figures have been explored in fiction, and especially in the past five years, heavily in women’s fiction. Having a book on an historical Muslim woman could help many of us who are not very familiar with Islam come into it in a non-threatening way. I’m not saying that we should learn our history from fiction; rather, that as a reader, I have often learned about a historical event or person through fiction and then gone on to more authoritative sources to learn the real facts and scholarly interpretations of those events and people.

    There are Muslim fiction out there, but when it comes to the lives Prophet Muhammed (peace be upon him) and any other Prophet for that matter, it’s something you don’t touch into. If it’s a sin to have pictures of Prophets, then it would be a bigger sin making a historical fiction about their lives, or the lives of their wives.

  140. Barb Ferrer said on 08.07.08 at 12:12 AM • [comment link]

    On behalf of sea cabbages everywhere, I’m offended. I will be alerting Sal ad Spin Er to let his list know of your flagrant attack on all cabbages everywhere.

    Don’t forget to threaten to sue… somebody.  Dunno who, but someone.

    BTW? You stink and your dress was ugly.

    BWAH!!!  Love you too sweetie.

  141. Sherry Jones said on 08.07.08 at 12:13 AM • [comment link]

    Not that I have anything against romance novels, but Ms. Spellberg and some here have completely mis-characterized my book! It is not a romance novel. It ‘s historical fiction with a 29-page bibliography (check it out on my blog, http://sherryjones/blogspot.com). Some publishers rejected it last year because it was “too literary.” And then, some turned it down because it was “too commercial.” All the talk of “bodice-ripping,” etc., has me flabbergasted.

    I, for one, am feeling very impressed with my mastery of the English language, having apparently written a pornographic novel that contains no actual sex scenes. ;-)

  142. Ziggy said on 08.07.08 at 12:13 AM • [comment link]

    But by this standard all historical fiction is pretty much verboten, since somewhere, someone is likely to feel this way about the characters you’ve chosen to write about (god knows as a Native American I find those Sweet Savage Love books by Cassie Edwards and her ilk offensive, but I vote with my wallet by avoiding them like the plague).

    Well put - and this is the extent of any action that I would be willing to take about the Sherry Jones book. It’s ironic for me to be trashing this book, because historical fiction is my favourite genre - everyone should read Red Earth and Pouring Rain by Vikram Chandra. It’s a brilliant, amazing book. Some of the characters are Hindu gods - which, theoretically, could offend a Hindu reader. But people have a right to be offended - that’s all I’m saying, and said in my original post, earlier on. Of course that shouldn’t stop books from being published!

  143. RfP said on 08.07.08 at 12:15 AM • [comment link]

    I don’t see anything deplorable in Spellberg’s behaviour. She had concerns and she shared them. She’s allowed to. I didn’t get the impression that she was fomenting racial hatred or supporting terrorism or condoning violence.

    We don’t really know what Spellberg did, but fomenting violence is not the only way to be deplorable.  My own distaste has little to do with the religious/cultural aspects of the situation.  (Well, that’s not true: I’d be interested in reading fiction about Mohammed’s life, so as a reader I’m more disappointed than I would have been if Da Vinci Code had died on the vine.)

    It’s sad to hear that an *academic*, of all people, is afraid of storytelling, opinion, and debate.  As described by the articles, Spellberg appears to:
    - Be “frantic” over a work of fiction (strange, given her own research appears to draw on both modern culture and historically contemporaneous fiction)
    - Think writing historical fiction is “mocking” (versus her own verified-by-time-machine history?)
    - Think mocking is bad (does she object to Shakespeare and Austen?  For that matter, was Rushdie really mocking?  I would say not entirely.)
    - Exaggerate minor points to support an argument based on freak-out, e.g. describing mild references to sex as “soft core pornography” (Jones says there aren’t actual sex scenes in the book)
    - Feel the need to “warn” a community about a work of fiction (just sad and condescending)

    I hope some of how she’s being portrayed is inaccurate; it doesn’t paint a great picture of her scholarship or her confidence in others’ reading and thinking skills.

  144. LJ said on 08.07.08 at 12:16 AM • [comment link]

    I think many are tired of people like Spellberg creating mass hysteria over things that would probably amount to non-issues if left alone.

    But raising concern over the issue may well have been her goal. It’s not an issue I feel strongly about, but clearly others do. Why is it acceptable to protest and raise awareness over some issues, but hysteria in this case?

    The threat of violence clearly did not originate with Spellberg. I find it sad that it is assumed that a middle-eastern professer “must have known” that violence was an inevitable corollary to Islamic protest.
    I have no idea whether Spellberg is herself Muslim, or whether her concern arises from respect and familiarity with Islam.
    Either way, dismissing her as raising unnecessary hysteria diminishes the fact that personification and fictionalisation of Muhammed is offensive to Islam. Whether or not you agree with that belief, whether or not you think that belief is worthy of respect, whether or not you place a belief in free speech over that belief doesn’t matter. There are people with clearly thought out, rational views on both sides of the issue. Dismissing outcry as hysterical smacks of privilege/

  145. Steph said on 08.07.08 at 12:17 AM • [comment link]

    There are Muslim fiction out there, but when it comes to the lives Prophet Muhammed (peace be upon him) and any other Prophet for that matter, it’s something you don’t touch into. If it’s a sin to have pictures of Prophets, then it would be a bigger sin making a historical fiction about their lives, or the lives of their wives.

    I guess we will have to agree to disagree.  We tend to question our religions, explore them, and debate them.  We have a sense of humor about it.  We have to.  As a Christian, I’m aware of our bloody history.  Fiction and imagination are just other ways to explore what was.

    I have to say that the nagatives especially concerning women in many religions bothers me.  Of course, I don’t have to live every day as a Muslim.  Maybe I would understand the differences then.  I don’t like books being pulled for offending though.  Even the dictionary offends some people.

  146. Sherry Jones said on 08.07.08 at 12:23 AM • [comment link]

    Oh—and I was only ever told of one warning of possible terrorism, and that was from Spellberg. I am the one who found the Husaini Youths post and discussion, and told Random House about it the next day as evidence that Ms. Spellberg was being disingenuous when she claimed, as I’d been told, that she feared for her own safety and that of her family. That claim came AFTER she’d called Shahed Amanullah and asked him to “alert” the Muslims.

    I’m not trying to influence the discussion here. Just wanting to set the record straight. Those Husaini Youths did not advocate violence, although I’m not clear on what their call for “pressuring” me to remove the books from the stores and apologize to Muslims really means.

    Mr. Amanullah has written to me and assured me he never meant this to happen. I believe him.

  147. JenB said on 08.07.08 at 12:26 AM • [comment link]

    Why is it acceptable to protest and raise awareness over some issues, but hysteria in this case?
    ...
    Dismissing outcry as hysterical smacks of privilege

    Words like “frantic”, “warn”, “victims”, and “widespread violence” are what often escalate a simple outcry to hysteria.

    Simple rhetoric.

    A public outcry says “This book is hurtful to such-and-such group of people.  Let’s discuss the issues at hand.”

    Hysteria says “These people must be stopped!  Someone will be offended!  People will get hurt!”

  148. Barb Ferrer said on 08.07.08 at 12:27 AM • [comment link]

    Sherry, your link isn’t working.  And thanks for visiting and giving us your own take.

  149. Ziggy said on 08.07.08 at 12:30 AM • [comment link]

    We tend to question our religions, explore them, and debate them.  We have a sense of humor about it.  We have to.

    Amen. I and many Muslims I know do this all the time. I wouldn’t want you to think that this is something Muslims don’t do! But we’re still allowed to get offended by what we perceive as disrespect towards our religion, the religion that we love very enough, enough to explore and question and debate. We have the right to voice our feelings, and you have the right to tell us that you think we’re wrong.

  150. Delux said on 08.07.08 at 12:35 AM • [comment link]

    For all the people who say that they want to know more about Muslim women—what exactly is getting in the way of that? Its not like leftist, moderate, and conservative Muslim women haven’t been writing, speaking, and getting published speaking on their own lives for years.

    Where exactly are you looking? 

    Shewhohashope, I am amazed at your stamina.

  151. Sherry Jones said on 08.07.08 at 12:35 AM • [comment link]

    Excuse me—I made a mistake. It’s http://sherryjones.blogspot.com Try i.t!

  152. Rebecca said on 08.07.08 at 12:36 AM • [comment link]

    My father, a long-time veteran of academia, calls this a “classic academic kill job.”

    He loves the title of this Web log, too.

    I looked up the AbeBooks version of the book and saw that it is only available via German bookseller. I’d love to purchase the book, but I won’t if it is in German…what do you all think, will it be in English or German?

    R

  153. azteclady said on 08.07.08 at 12:36 AM • [comment link]

    I guess that the thing is to be aware of the difference between (please note I’m paraphrasing not quoting any one commenter):

    I don’t want to read light (historical) fiction about people who are important to me

    vs

    Light historical fiction about people who are important to me shouldn’t be written—let alone published.

    I believe every individual is within her rights to proclaim the first as loudly and often as she feels the need to. The sedond? Not so much, because that’s when the rights of the people who would like to write that, or publish it, or dog-forbid! read it, would be infringed upon.

  154. Rebecca said on 08.07.08 at 12:37 AM • [comment link]

    My father, a long-time veteran of academia, calls this a “classic academic kill job.”

    He loves this Web log, too.

    I looked up the AbeBooks version of the book and saw that it is only available via German bookseller. I’d love to purchase the book, but I won’t if it is in German…what do you all think, will it be in English or German?

    R

  155. Sherry Jones said on 08.07.08 at 12:44 AM • [comment link]

    It hasn’t been translated into German. I’m sure it’s in English.

  156. Teddypig said on 08.07.08 at 12:45 AM • [comment link]

    http://sherryjones.blogspot.com/

    Quick, someone ask Sherry for a juicy excerpt so we can all have a taste of the blasphemy!

  157. Rebecca said on 08.07.08 at 12:47 AM • [comment link]

    Sherry: I’m ordering it.
    R

  158. MoJo said on 08.07.08 at 12:49 AM • [comment link]

    My father, a long-time veteran of academia, calls this a “classic academic kill job.”

    Frankly, that’s what it sounded like to me, too.  Looks like it may backfire badly.

  159. egoscribo said on 08.07.08 at 12:51 AM • [comment link]

    I’m enjoying imagining what will happen when someone writes a novel about Mary, Mother of Jesus, with hot sex, naked bodies, and panting. I’m sure there will be no controversy or threats of violence at all. No, no.

  160. Kaite said on 08.07.08 at 12:59 AM • [comment link]

    (and no-one else is boggling at the statement about muslims being an indistinguishable mass of murderers and crazies. No-one?)

    If it’s any consolation (and I know I’m coming to the bonfire a bit late,) I’m totally on your side here.

    I’ve worked in retail for over a dozen years, so I *know* that being a massive asshole has nothing to do with religion, race or creed. Pretty much anyone can do it, and then they use their religion, race or creed to excuse themselves for it.

    I also knew you were joking about the Salman Rushdie crack. Since you didn’t call him a buttmonkey though, most people didn’t get it. :-)

  161. Ruth said on 08.07.08 at 01:00 AM • [comment link]

    Sarah?

    I can’t take any more banging my head on my desk. Please cease and desist with the posting of things that make my blood boil.

    kthanks.

  162. kirsten saell said on 08.07.08 at 01:04 AM • [comment link]

    I find it sad that it is assumed that a middle-eastern professer “must have known” that violence was an inevitable corollary to Islamic protest.

    You’re joking, right? I’m not saying all (or even many) Muslims are prone to violent protest, but yeah, after the Danish cartoon fiasco and the Rushdie thing, I think it would be disingenuous of her to claim she had no idea violent protest was likely. In fact, she even stated as much to the publisher.

  163. Connie said on 08.07.08 at 01:06 AM • [comment link]

    You know, I’m reading this and half crying, half laughing.  I don’t care if the novel makes fun of every religion in the world.  If you don’t like it, don’t read it!  I personally hate a lot of the literature out there.  So what?  I’ve been majorly offended by some as well.  Grow up, put on adult panties, and deal with it.  No publishing house should ever back down from publishing a book because ‘It may offend people’

  164. Virginia Shultz-Charette said on 08.07.08 at 01:07 AM • [comment link]

    Sorry, Ms. Spellberg sounds an awful lot like those authors who tried to keep the movie “The DaVinci Code” from being released because it supposedly borrowed from their book (and I believe their publisher was the same one as Dan Brown’s). It just smacks too much of conflict of interest. I bet she hopes that this book gets published and that people buy her book to make comparisons.

  165. LJ said on 08.07.08 at 01:10 AM • [comment link]

    I’m sorry, that was unclear of me. I was intending to say that I thought it was troubling that the progression between islamic protest and violence was so strongly linked in some of the commenters minds that they seemed to be indivisible. I phrased it badly.

  166. Ziggy said on 08.07.08 at 01:11 AM • [comment link]

    I just saw this:

    I’m supposed to worry about the sensibilities of a group of people who murder daughters, sisters, wives and other FEMALE relatives because some asshole prick got his fucking honor bent out of shape? Who torture and mutilate women so they can’t enjoy sex?

    Where do I fucking begin? Girlparts intact. None of my male relatives would ever lay a finger on me. What’s your point exactly? Atrocities are committed EVERYWHERE, by people of ALL religions and creeds.

  167. Lori said on 08.07.08 at 01:15 AM • [comment link]

    I’m enjoying imagining what will happen when someone writes a novel about Mary, Mother of Jesus, with hot sex, naked bodies, and panting. I’m sure there will be no controversy or threats of violence at all. No, no.

    Again, works like this have already been published.  People got offended and upset and in some cases made threats, but the works were still published.

  168. shewhohashope said on 08.07.08 at 01:16 AM • [comment link]

    For all the people who say that they want to know more about Muslim women—what exactly is getting in the way of that? Its not like leftist, moderate, and conservative Muslim women haven’t been writing, speaking, and getting published speaking on their own lives for years.

    Where exactly are you looking?

    Clearly it is necessary for a white lady to bring the lives of Muslim women to their attention.

    Shewhohashope, I am amazed at your stamina.

    I just lost it? I promised I wouldn’t make any ad hominen attacks or strike out irrationally or say anything inflammatory even if I was feeling like I was being attacked. Whops.

    At the risk of being melodramatic, I don’t comment anywhere near as much as I read but this was like my happy place. Somewhere to read about ‘trashy’ books written for and by women with insightful feminist commentary! It’s always a shame when somewhere that feels like a safe space for me as a woman makes me unhappy as a Muslim or vice versa. I don’t know. Maybe my expectations are too high.

  169. Ruth said on 08.07.08 at 01:20 AM • [comment link]

    I’m supposed to worry about the sensibilities of a group of people who murder daughters, sisters, wives and other FEMALE relatives because some asshole prick got his fucking honor bent out of shape? Who torture and mutilate women so they can’t enjoy sex?

    I see people getting upset over this quote and would like to offer a different viewpoint.

    I wonder if they poster meant this to refer to the people that threaten violence over literature or comics, not Muslims in general. I certainly read it that way.

    I could be wrong, of course.

  170. kirsten saell said on 08.07.08 at 01:20 AM • [comment link]

    Where do I fucking begin? Girlparts intact. None of my male relatives would ever lay a finger on me. What’s your point exactly? Atrocities are committed EVERYWHERE, by people of ALL religions and creeds.

    Yeah, that one kinda got to me, too, but you know, I think the commentor was referring to that small violent, reactionary, extremist segment of Muslims that seems to take offense at everything that doesn’t mesh with their interpretation of Islam. She wasn’t talking about moderate Muslims. If all Muslims were as enlightened and reasonable and forward-thinking as Ziggy and shewhohashope, there would be no cause for debate here at all.

  171. Sara said on 08.07.08 at 01:21 AM • [comment link]

    Well, on the bright side this author can probably count on a lot more readers than she would have had otherwise, providing someone will publish it!  The book doesn’t sound like my cup of tea based on the description, but you can bet I want to read it now!

  172. kirsten saell said on 08.07.08 at 01:25 AM • [comment link]

    Clearly it is necessary for a white lady to bring the lives of Muslim women to their attention.

    Wait—are we discussing religion or color? ;)

    I think it has more to do with the fact that this is a novel. Women who like to read novels do not necessarily enjoy reading scholarly or autobiographical works. 

    And because this one is written by someone of similar cultural (I won’t say religious, because I think a great deal of North Americans are like me—areligious) background, there is a point of connection between author and reader that doesn’t necessarily make itself felt when reading work by women of other cultures.

  173. Delux said on 08.07.08 at 01:26 AM • [comment link]

    If all Muslims were as enlightened and reasonable and forward-thinking as Ziggy and shewhohashope, there would be no cause for debate here at all.

    You know, I’m sure this is meant as a compliment, there’s a lot of people out there saying the same thing about Americans…

  174. azteclady said on 08.07.08 at 01:29 AM • [comment link]

    I apologize for my kneejerk (heavy on the jerk) first comment in this thread. As Ziggy said,

    Atrocities are committed EVERYWHERE, by people of ALL religions and creeds.

  175. kirsten saell said on 08.07.08 at 01:30 AM • [comment link]

    You know, I’m sure this is meant as a compliment, there’s a lot of people out there saying the same thing about Americans…

    Totally agree, soon as I hit submit, I realized I should have added “or people in general” after “all Muslims”. It does sound a bit condescending. Sorry.

    Does it help that I’m Canadian? ;)

  176. LJ said on 08.07.08 at 01:31 AM • [comment link]

    Okay, I’m going to bed because it’s hitting midnight here. But thank you to all the posters because I think this is an interesting debate.
    I’m a long-term lurker come out of lurkerdom because I was slightly horrified at the Islam/protest/terrorism comparisons that were happening.
    The main thing I keep noticing is the “if you don’t like it, don’t read it” or “no-one’s forcing you to buy it” argument.
    I can see that this feels like the rational response, but I think it’s important to realise that just as it seems reasonable from one world view to publish everything and let the reader sort it out, it seems equally as reasonable from another world view to respect the most personal and sacred aspects of one’s religion over that.

    I also think that Spellberg’s motivation is unknown, and it may be a bit much to accuse her of the many things she has been accused of. Until further evidence comes to light, I would respectfully suggest that the machiavellian plot aspect of things be downplayed.

    I think the book will be published eventually, and I’ll be interested to see what the reaction is. Good luck to Sherri Jones. And now, to bed.
    Sleep well, all. Or continue the posting…..

  177. kirsten saell said on 08.07.08 at 01:36 AM • [comment link]

    Atrocities are committed EVERYWHERE, by people of ALL religions and creeds.

    And it’s very easy for them to justify what they’ve done (and encourage others to do the same) by saying it was “God’s will”. Which is why I haven’t got the stomach for any religion.

  178. Manda80 said on 08.07.08 at 01:36 AM • [comment link]

    Ya know,  I am offended by things in movies and books constantly.  I am offended as a Southerner when we are all called racist, ignorant rednecks.  I am offended as an American when I am called stupid and ignorant.  I am offended as a Catholic when I am told I am not a Christian by other supposed Christians.  I have read all of these things on books or in blogs or simply been told them.  That doesn’t, however, mean that the person saying them doesn’t have a right to.  I may hate what you say, or write, but I will defend your right to do so.  I also find it ridiculous to stop publication of a book on “supposed” threats.  It is either racist or fearful.  It is racist to assume that Muslim protest will be violent.  It is cowering to terrorists to refuse to publish something that terrorists find offensive.

  179. shewhohashope said on 08.07.08 at 01:37 AM • [comment link]

    Wait—are we discussing religion or color? ;)

    I think it has more to do with the fact that this is a novel. Women who like to read novels do not necessarily enjoy reading scholarly or autobiographical works.

    And because this one is written by someone of similar cultural (I won’t say religious, because I think a great deal of North Americans are like me—areligious) background, there is a point of connection between author and reader that doesn’t necessarily make itself felt when reading work by women of other cultures.

    Do you think it’s possible to talk about one without the other in this case?

    And I suppose that really depends on whether you want to identify with the author, or you want the author to identify with the subject.

    I’m going to sleep on that now because it is also midnight here.

  180. Ziggy said on 08.07.08 at 01:37 AM • [comment link]

    I think the commentor was referring to that small violent, reactionary, extremist segment of Muslims that seems to take offense at everything that doesn’t mesh with their interpretation of Islam. She wasn’t talking about moderate Muslims.

    Fair enough. But I still feel that, in a thread where emotions were almost inevitably going to run high, the commenter could have phrased herself a bit more discreetly OR made it clear to whom she was referring.

    Bedtime now but thanks to everyone for a very interesting discussion. Hooray for reasoned debate!

  181. unusualmusic said on 08.07.08 at 01:38 AM • [comment link]

    And because this one is written by someone of similar cultural (I won’t say religious, because I think a great deal of North Americans are like me—areligious) background, there is a point of connection between author and reader that doesn’t necessarily make itself felt when reading work by women of other cultures.

    Thsio sentence comes off to me as if white women other white women to translate the experience of Muslim women in order to read and enjoy their stories.  Is that what you meant?

  182. DianeH said on 08.07.08 at 01:39 AM • [comment link]

    Yea, Sherry!  Thanks for visiting and braving The-Speaking-Up.

    It must be heartbreaking to be in this position as a writer, where you don’t get the biggest payoff of all—being published… and then read.

    I hope there is a HEA for you.

  183. kirsten saell said on 08.07.08 at 01:45 AM • [comment link]

    I think it’s important to realise that just as it seems reasonable from one world view to publish everything and let the reader sort it out, it seems equally as reasonable from another world view to respect the most personal and sacred aspects of one’s religion over that.

    But see, it ain’t my religion. I don’t have to respect it further than to allow others freedom to practice it if they choose. And no religion has the right to tell me what I can and can’t read, thanks, not even my own, if I had one.

  184. kelly said on 08.07.08 at 01:47 AM • [comment link]

    wow.  um, just read all of that and HOT DAMN was it ...enlightening.  i fall on the side of publish, and i’ll vote with my wallet, but i have to laugh about the porn thing because when i first read the ‘sex’ scene i thought, ‘is she quoting psalms or something like omar khayyam?’

    and i’m not trying to piss off the muslim faith, honest, i just think it’s interesting that christians have watched, with varying degrees of distaste, a hella lot of-oh, interpretations of someone we regard as god, while mohammad was (not merely, considering how kickass he was in his lifetime, but still kinda a half-step down) a prophet, and IS NOT allowed to be messed with.

    i’m sure that says something about the faiths, but i’m waaaay too braindead to make the attempt.

    shewhohashope, i can only say thanks for holding it down.  you held your ground, you explained, and i hope this didn’t ruin your happy place.

  185. Barb Ferrer said on 08.07.08 at 01:48 AM • [comment link]

    I think it has more to do with the fact that this is a novel. Women who like to read novels do not necessarily enjoy reading scholarly or autobiographical works.

    Wow, that’s news to me.  Do I have to turn in my ovaries somewhere then?

    Yes, I’m being incredibly sarcastic.  But sweeping generalizations make me a little nuts.

  186. kirsten saell said on 08.07.08 at 01:54 AM • [comment link]

    And I suppose that really depends on whether you want to identify with the author, or you want the author to identify with the subject.

    I think when it comes to drastically different cultures, it helps sometimes to have an intermediary, an interpreter, if you will, to help one side unerstand the other.

  187. Manda80 said on 08.07.08 at 02:00 AM • [comment link]

    Join me in being dismayed by this statement as well.  I read many, many academic works in addition to novels.  I read for my profession and my own edification.  I also like my novels to be well researched if they are historical in nature.  I wasn’t aware that scholarly works and novels were mutually exclusive.

  188. Delux said on 08.07.08 at 02:01 AM • [comment link]

    I think when it comes to drastically different cultures, it helps sometimes to have an intermediary, an interpreter, if you will, to help one side unerstand the other.

    Really?

    Who are these ‘interpreters’? How do they get chosen? What makes them valid?

    What makes them necessary?

  189. kirsten saell said on 08.07.08 at 02:07 AM • [comment link]

    I think it has more to do with the fact that this is a novel. Women who like to read novels do not necessarily enjoy reading scholarly or autobiographical works.

    Wow, that’s news to me.  Do I have to turn in my ovaries in somewhere then?

    Yes, I’m being incredibly sarcastic.  But sweeping generalizations make me a little nuts.

    I don’t think it was a sweeping generalization. The same could be said of men who read Sci-fi not necessarily being interested in reading non-fiction. People who enjoy novels don’t always read or enjoy non-fiction. Guess I just shouldn’t have used the word “women”, except I was replying to a comment that referred to “women”.

    No one has to turn in their ovaries. I, however, shouldn’t try to take part in debates when I’m distracted by work.

  190. Octavia said on 08.07.08 at 02:13 AM • [comment link]

    We develop stereotypes based on things we see, read, and hear.  We read the story about the Australian Muslim leader that compared uncovered women to meat being left out.  We see the video of the Muslim girl stoned to death for caring for a boy that wasn’t of her religion.

    As a sidenote: if you’re referring to the death of Dua Khalil Aswad in Iraq - she wasn’t Muslim, she was Yazidi, which is a different faith altogether. Her relatives stoned her to death in an ‘honour killing’ because her loved one was a Muslim.

    It’s not the positive you ask for, but it still kind of proves your point. In this case the stereotype was already there, and many media largely glossed over the fact that this gruesome story didn’t exactly fit it - or worse, they made it fit.

    I’m boggling at Denise Spellberg’s actions. Why warn possible protesters and then warn about possible protesters? Is there any proof beyond what Spellberg alleged might become ‘a national security issue’ beyond, you know, her alleging? As Barb Ferrer said, yeah, smacks of conflict of interest, and more.

  191. Kat said on 08.07.08 at 02:21 AM • [comment link]

    Denise Spellman is the sort of “living authority” on the historical A’isha which is why and how she is able to raise the sort of opposition that she can and did to this novel. There is a sentiment amongst women working Middle East Women’s Studies and Islamic Gender Studies, of which I am a part, of a constant fear of neo-Orientalism, neo-Colonialism, and the perpetuation either through scholarship, art, or in this case fiction, of the “exotic Eastern other.”

    That said, one point I do agree with Spellman on is that that the work that is being done to reclaim historical Muslim women for the purpose of activism and reinforcement of women’s rights in Islam, is quite fragile, and the idea, however absurd or fictional, that that could be threatened by a novel, is theoretically possible. In fact, she has proven this fact by rallying who she has rallied and during the summer no less when trying to find any academic is next to impossible.

    That said however, the mind boggles that we can have The Red Tent, with the Jewish matriarchs, a fictional biography of Mary Magdalene, and as someone mentioned above Dan Brown’s treatment of Mary Magdalene as the wife of Christ, but we cannot publish a book on the favourite wife of the Prophet Muhammad without having another Danish Cartoon Fiasco. More than anything, it frightens me that academics are now reaching outside of their own spheres and instigating the censorship that we work so hard to tear down.

  192. Celina Summers said on 08.07.08 at 02:25 AM • [comment link]

    I’ve been following this closely all day.  On a writers’ forum I frequent, we’ve been discussing this (at times quite heatedly) and were prompted by SBTB’s original post.  (Thanks, ladies—you rule!)

    As an author, I’m sickened that such a thing could happen.  What is this now?  Censorship by contract?  The thought that an author asked to review an ARC could create controversy deliberately to affect another writer’s book negatively?  Disgusting.  You’d think that writers would be above such things.  I don’t even want to discuss the publisher’s decision—it doesn’t make any sense to me.

    Prominent Muslim figures have appeared in literature for a long time without this kind of controversy. Religious figures abound in fiction, and not just in Dan Brown’s work. But, to condemn a work and protest it without even reading it goes beyond the pale. How can you get angry over a book you’ve never read?  Reminds me of the alarmist book suppressions that led to works like Huckleberry Finn or The Catcher in the Rye being pulled from library shelves, or the protests against Harry Potter because they ‘promote witchcraft.’  Ridiculous!

    Thanks, Ms. Jones, for adding your input to this discussion and the very best of luck to you.  I can think of hundreds of people on my writers’ forum who are now intent upon buying your novel when it comes out.  Everyone who loves literature, whether writers or readers, should be disgusted at this type of behavior.  We are free to write or read what we please, and I for one don’t intend to be dictated to by anyone—be it publisher or embittered professor—as to what books reside upon my shelves.

  193. Kat said on 08.07.08 at 02:31 AM • [comment link]

    Denise Spellberg’s one claim to fame is her book on A’isha, which incidentally, I used for a paper on menstruation in Islam, but I digress. It’s very heavily padded because there is virtually nothing, except for snippets and hadiths about A’isha, so in a sense, her work is largely a body of historical fiction as well.  The actual hadiths about A’isha are much more profane than anything that any romance writer could devise, covering topics from sexual intercourse to menstruation.

    I haven’t seen ANYONE on any listserver mention a word about it. You could take anyone’s name and throw it into this book whether it be Shajaraat al-Dhurr or Hurrem Sultan. It’s a book about a harem, it might not be great, but it’s not meant to be a scholastic text.

    Give us the bloody book!

  194. Teddypig said on 08.07.08 at 02:33 AM • [comment link]

    I think it’s important to realise that just as it seems reasonable from one world view to publish everything and let the reader sort it out, it seems equally as reasonable from another world view to respect the most personal and sacred aspects of one’s religion over that.

    Just like it is equally reasonable that 6 out of the 7 countries in the world that have the death penalty for being homosexual are Muslim? The Iranian government alone has executed more than 4,000 people charged with homosexual acts

    Sorry, that just hangs there in the back of my mind like a boulder crushing those thoughts of mutual respect and understanding into dust. My being an uppity fag and all, you understand.

  195. TarotbyArwen said on 08.07.08 at 02:50 AM • [comment link]

    Here’s a romance reader who happens to adore autobiographical. As well as sci fi and pulp spy novels ala Remo of the “freakishly thick wrists”. Not much on uber scholarly, but I’ll take that over sweeping generalizations any day.  I don’t think you can apply that to males or females or even those of more fluid gender persuasions.

  196. JenB said on 08.07.08 at 02:59 AM • [comment link]

    Denise Spellberg’s one claim to fame is her book on A’isha, which incidentally, I used for a paper on menstruation in Islam, but I digress. It’s very heavily padded because there is virtually nothing, except for snippets and hadiths about A’isha, so in a sense, her work is largely a body of historical fiction as well.  The actual hadiths about A’isha are much more profane than anything that any romance writer could devise, covering topics from sexual intercourse to menstruation.

    If both authors have written fictional works on important figures in Islam, is it possible that Ms. Spellberg’s motivation had more to do with competition than actual alarm over possible offense?

    That’s even more offensive to me than trashing a religious icon in fictional literature.  In that case, not only are the Muslims [allegedly] being wronged by the author of the now-unpublished book, but they’re also [allegedly] being used as an excuse for a snarky bitch academic to shut out her competition.

  197. Mary said on 08.07.08 at 03:09 AM • [comment link]

    Okay, let’s just remove the word ‘Muslim’ from this for a moment.  Jones read Spellberg’s book, liked it, and said to her publisher, “Hey here is an author I really respect who has written on the same subject (in a very different way) maybe you could ask her for a quote?”

    And then Spellberg told Random House not even, “I do not want to provide a quote or have my name associated with this book” (in fact she utterly, epically fails at not having her name associated with this book), not even, “I don’t like this book, I think it sucks, and you can quote me on that,” no, she told them the book was probably going to lead to terrorist attacks, and that she had in fact alerted some people who had an action plan to make the book disappear and make the author apologize to like 1/6 of the world’s population for mortally offending them.

    That’s just fucking classy, man.

    Note to self: do not buy Spellberg’s book.  Further note to self: buy Jones’s.

  198. Lyra said on 08.07.08 at 03:09 AM • [comment link]

    Wasn’t there a huge slew of romance-flavoured historical fiction novels a few years back based on the women of the Bible (Sarai, Rahab, to name a few)?

    I don’t really see how it’s any more or less offensive to write about the wife of one religious figure (Abram) than another (Muhammad).

  199. Kat said on 08.07.08 at 03:13 AM • [comment link]

    It’s not so much fiction as it is attempting to construct an academic body of work on a woman for whom there are only really oral testimonies and histories available. It’s like writing a biography on Mary Magdalene or Leah, it’s impossible to construct a reliable source when you’re dealing with a largely nomadic, oral culture. Of course you have to pad it with this, that and the next thing. The same is true of Nabia Abbott’s book on A’isha, which I have to say, although I am admittedly biased because I am an alumnae of SOAS where Dr Abbott taught, is a far superior body of work on A’isha.

    Anyway… I would just chalk it up to an academic snitfit. Had it been any other woman in Islamic history, this would be an entirely different discourse. Someone like Hurrem Sultan for instance who supposedly seduced her way out of the Imperial Harem and into co-rulership with Sulaiman, no one would bat an eyelash. Spellberg has done Jones an ENORMOUS favour by pitching her little fit publically and certainly has drawn an eye back to HER work on A’isha. If she had never made such a massive issue about it, it would’ve sailed right under the radar with the rest of the novels on the harem, harem life, belly dancers, the Persian Empire, and whatever else the “West” can come-up with on the way.

    There’s actually a new article on Spellberg on Wikipedia that is already being disputed. It’s free publicity for EVERYONE, least of which is A’isha herself!

  200. kirsten saell said on 08.07.08 at 03:14 AM • [comment link]

    Really?

    Who are these ‘interpreters’? How do they get chosen? What makes them valid?

    What makes them necessary?

    What makes anyone valid to write anything (other than the # of books in their bibliography, perhaps)? Are you saying only Muslims should write books about Muslims? Only Catholics write books on Catholicism? Wouldn’t that quash debate and differing viewpoints, rather than encourage them?

    Listen, I’m not trying to get under anyone’s skin here, but fiction is arguably more accessible to the average reader, and I think it’s more of a “sweeping generalization” to imply that the only western women who should be allowed an understanding of Muslim women are those who choose to read non-fiction.

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