Outrage aux bonnes mœurs
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+ | [[Image:Les Epaves by Rops.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[Les Épaves]]'' ([[1866]]) by [[Félicien Rops]] (detail)]] | ||
[[Image:Inversions.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[Inversions]]'', the first French gay journal is published between [[1924]] and [[1926]], it stopped publication after the French government charged the publishers with "[[Outrage aux bonnes mœurs]]". Its full title was ''Inversions ... in [[art]], [[literature]], [[philosophy]] and [[science]]''. [[Sexual inversion (sexology)|Sexual inversion]] was a term used by [[sexologist]]s in the late [[19th]] and early [[20th century]], to refer to [[homosexuality]].]] | [[Image:Inversions.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[Inversions]]'', the first French gay journal is published between [[1924]] and [[1926]], it stopped publication after the French government charged the publishers with "[[Outrage aux bonnes mœurs]]". Its full title was ''Inversions ... in [[art]], [[literature]], [[philosophy]] and [[science]]''. [[Sexual inversion (sexology)|Sexual inversion]] was a term used by [[sexologist]]s in the late [[19th]] and early [[20th century]], to refer to [[homosexuality]].]] | ||
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- | In the French history of censorship, one year after the promulgation of the law on [[freedom of the press]] durig the [[French Third Republic]], a first restriction is brought on by the law of [[August 2]] [[1882]] on the offense of "outrage aux bonnes mœurs" by way of the press, posters or any other writing. The law had as object to limit the proliferation of [[erotic literature|erotic]] and [[pornographic literature]] reported by the police. | + | ''[[Outrage aux bonnes mœurs]]'' (Eng: "an insult to public decency") is a French expression. In the history of [[French censorship]], one year after the promulgation of the law on [[Law on the Freedom of the Press of 29 July 1881|freedom of the press]] during the [[French Third Republic]], a first restriction is brought on by the [[law of 1819]] on the offense of "outrage aux bonnes mœurs" by way of the press, posters or any other writing. |
== See also == | == See also == | ||
+ | *[[Liste des ouvrages répréhensibles et obscènes pour être dénoncés au Comité de Salut public]] | ||
*[[Public morality]] | *[[Public morality]] | ||
*[[French censorship]] | *[[French censorship]] | ||
+ | *[[Outrage]] | ||
+ | *[[Censorship in Belgium]] | ||
- | == See also == | ||
- | |||
- | *[[Outrage]] | ||
{{GFDL}} | {{GFDL}} |
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Outrage aux bonnes mœurs (Eng: "an insult to public decency") is a French expression. In the history of French censorship, one year after the promulgation of the law on freedom of the press during the French Third Republic, a first restriction is brought on by the law of 1819 on the offense of "outrage aux bonnes mœurs" by way of the press, posters or any other writing.
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See also
- Liste des ouvrages répréhensibles et obscènes pour être dénoncés au Comité de Salut public
- Public morality
- French censorship
- Outrage
- Censorship in Belgium
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