What if calling someone stupid was a crime?
Lionel Shriver imagines cancel culture going to even greater extremes
ARE YOU hateful enough to use the S-word? You know the one: stupid. It has been banned in schools, its use and synonyms (dumb, slow) considered “slurs” worthy of expulsion. Even its antonyms are grounds for book bans and boycotts: only a “cerebral supremacist” would have the gall to buy Elena Ferrante’s novel “My Brilliant Friend”. Instead, those wanting to be politically correct display copies of “The Calumny of IQ: Why Discrimination Against ‘D— People’ Is the Last Great Civil Rights Fight” on their coffee tables.
This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “Dummy business”
Culture May 25th 2024
- Meet the man causing cracks in the antiquities trade
- What if calling someone stupid was a crime?
- Jürgen Klopp’s masterclass in how to win—and lose
- The hit series “Bridgerton” has set off a string-quartet boom
- Spices have their own riveting, piquant history
- The controversial cult of the host club in Japan
Discover more
Germany’s former chancellor sets out to restore her reputation
But her new memoir is unlikely to change her critics’ minds
The best books of 2024, as chosen by The Economist
Readers will never think the same way again about games, horses and spies
What to read to understand Elon Musk
The world’s richest man was shaped by science fiction
Tech and religion are very much alike
They both have gods, rich institutions and secretive cultures
Woodrow Wilson’s reputation continues to decline
A dispassionate new biography chronicles the former president’s hostility to suffrage
The cult of Jordan Peterson
What the Canadian intellectual gets right about young men