Students at the University of Richmond are mad as hell about Robert Crumb's comics, and they're not going to take it any more. Student Timothy Patterson is horrified:
“[The] book features a number of appalling depictions, such as the raping of a little girl, forced oral sex with a woman chained to a desk, and a picture of Crumb sitting on top of a pile of drugged, raped women dressed as a king,” Patterson said.This year, Bertram Ashe, an associate professor of English and American studies, assigned “My Troubles with Women” and a documentary on Crumb titled “Crumb” to his American Misfit: Geek Literature and Culture class.
Patterson’s response questioned Ashe’s academic freedom to assign this material to his class.
Ashe responds cleverly:
“I’m offended by a middle-aged man having sex with a 13-year-old girl, but I wouldn’t let that stop me from putting Nabokov’s ‘Lolita’ on my syllabus,” he said.
Which is a good point. If Crumb were a prose stylist, would any of this be happening? The funny thing is that Patterson's whining is sure to only help the sales of Crumb's splendid new adaptation of the Book of Genesis; any publicity is good publicity. Reading other letters to the editor about U of R's Crumb exhibit and lecture highlight how conservative some college students are, and I find all this talk about "the bounds of freedom" to be alarming.
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