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Comstockery
[ kuhm-stok-uh-ree, kom- ]
noun
- overzealous moral censorship of the fine arts and literature, often mistaking outspokenly honest works for salacious ones.
comstockery
/ ˈkʌmˌstɒkərɪ; ˈkɒm- /
noun
- immoderate censorship on grounds of immorality
Other Words From
- Comstocker noun
- Com·stocki·an adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of Comstockery1
Word History and Origins
Origin of Comstockery1
Example Sentences
“Comstockery is the world’s standing joke at the expense of the United States,” Shaw commented.
“Comstockery has been given a new lease on life by this Congress,” Ms. Schroeder, who died in March, mourned at the time in a floor speech.
George Bernard Shaw said America was suffering from “Comstockery.”
In 1905, George Bernard Shaw, the playwright, referred to censorship-happy moralism as “Comstockery” in a letter to The New York Times.
Yet while chiding extreme libertarianism, Selbourne veers dangerously close to Comstockery in his tsk-tsking of noise that “masquerades as music,” gender fluidity, sperm banks, bad grammar, video plagiarists and other presumed vices.
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