Kazuo Ishiguro worries about self-censorship of young writers who “fear attacks online” –BBC News



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Rebecca Jones Art Editor, BBC News

Sir Kazuo Ishiguro

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Kazuo Ishiguro described the self-censorship situation as “dangerous”

Young writers may self-censor for fear of attacks and denials on the Internet. A prominent Japanese-born English author, Sir Kazuo Ishiguro (66), expressed his concern in an interview with the BBC.

Known for his works such as “The remains of the day” and “Never let me go”, Sir Kazuo, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2017, has an aggressive and negative atmosphere that spreads to the world through the Internet and other warned that there were people who did not write what they wanted to write in the terrible “climate of fear”.

He said young writers may be concerned that they could be “lynched online by unidentified mobs and have their lives ruined.”

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