
By Marcelo Brito
The first virtue of the book is its ambition. Mchangama is not content to repeat the most well-known liberal catechism, the one that blurs Milton, Voltaire and Mill as if everything had started and ended in Western Europe. His account insists that the history of freedom of expression is neither a straight line nor a monopoly of the West. The author incorporates figures, conflicts and traditions that overflow the usual geography of the canon, and there lies much of his interest: in showing that the drive to control the word and the impulse to resist that control are as old as they are universal. The promise of “global history” is not a mere advertising ornament; it is part of the method and also of the thesis.
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Jacob Mchangama is the Founder and Executive Director of The Future of Free Speech. He is also a research professor at Vanderbilt University and a Senior Fellow at The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE).
