Expurgation  

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-'''Expurgation''' means the act of '''expurgating''', purging, or cleansing; [[purification]] from anything [[noxious]], [[offensive]], [[sin]]ful, or erroneous. In [[censorship|book and film censorship]] the term ''expurgated'' means having had [[erroneous]], [[obscene]], or other [[objectionable]] material [[removed]].+:''The act of [[expurgate|expurgating]], [[purge|purging]], or [[cleanse|cleansing]]; [[purification]] from anything [[noxious]], [[offensive]], [[sinful]], or [[erroneous]].''
'''Expurgation''' is a form of [[censorship]] by way of purging anything deemed noxious or offensive, usually from an artistic work. It has also been called '''[[bowdlerization]]''', after [[Thomas Bowdler]], who in 1818 published an expurgated edition of [[William Shakespeare]]'s work that he considered to be more appropriate for [[women and children]]. He similarly edited [[Edward Gibbon]]'s ''[[Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire]]''. '''Expurgation''' is a form of [[censorship]] by way of purging anything deemed noxious or offensive, usually from an artistic work. It has also been called '''[[bowdlerization]]''', after [[Thomas Bowdler]], who in 1818 published an expurgated edition of [[William Shakespeare]]'s work that he considered to be more appropriate for [[women and children]]. He similarly edited [[Edward Gibbon]]'s ''[[Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire]]''.

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The act of expurgating, purging, or cleansing; purification from anything noxious, offensive, sinful, or erroneous.

Expurgation is a form of censorship by way of purging anything deemed noxious or offensive, usually from an artistic work. It has also been called bowdlerization, after Thomas Bowdler, who in 1818 published an expurgated edition of William Shakespeare's work that he considered to be more appropriate for women and children. He similarly edited Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.

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