果冻传媒app官方

Table of Contents

Investigating Halloween costumes is 鈥榓n issue of free speech鈥 鈥 even if universities say otherwise (UPDATED)

Colleges and universities across the country are once again investigating students for their choice of Halloween costumes or are implementing problematic policies that threaten consequences for choosing an 鈥渙ffensive鈥 costume. 

FIRE has tracked the trend of policing Halloween costumes since the mid-2000s. 鈥Halloween hysteria鈥 appears to have died down since its spike in 2015 with Yale鈥檚 Halloween costume controversy, but now may be on the rise again.

  • Earlier this month, we named Furman University鈥檚 policy banning costumes that 鈥渞einforced stereotypes鈥 or were 鈥渄emeaning鈥 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Speech Code of the Month.
  • The president of the College of Charleston in South Carolina warned students in a campus-wide email Oct. 16 to "[m]ake sure you do not choose a costume or party theme that is insensitive to someone鈥檚 race, culture, gender or sexual identity," lest they face "consequences from the College." The email also included a video, telling students that "cultural appropriation is not a costume."
  • The president of California Polytechnic State University a student鈥檚 Instagram post featuring the caption "Cowboys vs (Illegal) Aliens,鈥 after fellow students said that the photo 鈥.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

But after years of criticism from civil liberties groups like 果冻传媒app官方, some universities appear to be anticipating a backlash.

鈥淭his is not an issue of free speech,鈥 read from the University of Connecticut, warning students 鈥渢o be cautious in their Halloween activities in light of recent racially motivated incidents on campus.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

(Last week, two UConn students were arrested under an unconstitutional 1917 law preventing 鈥渞idicule鈥 when they yelled a racial slur loud enough for others to hear. That law, which has rarely been enforced, was written in an effort to prevent false advertising.)

The rest of the UConn statement, penned by associate vice president and dean of students, , makes it clear that her office isn鈥檛 focused on criminal behavior, but expression.

In other words, it is an issue of free speech.

鈥淛okes and costumes,鈥 Daugherty wrote, 鈥渃annot be used as an excuse to belittle the significance of identity and inclusivity on our campus and our world. These are our choices. Our actions. Our commitment to care.鈥&苍产蝉辫; 

FIRE, indeed, have choices. On public campuses like UConn, College of Charleston, and CalPoly, those expressive choices are guaranteed by the First Amendment. (Private campuses that voluntarily make similar guarantees, like Furman does, must uphold them.)

It鈥檚 speech, not censorship, that spurs profound change.

If students make the choice to engage in offensive expression on a campus that promises free speech, that expression is protected. But that guarantee of free expression means other students can make their own choices to condemn, criticize, and speak out against expression they find abhorrent. 

But punishment and investigation (a form of punishment in itself) are not permissible.

Why? Why can we not punish students who engage in expression many, or even most, find offensive?

Because that鈥檚 precisely what the First Amendment is for 鈥 to protect 鈥渙ffensive鈥 expression. And for good reason.

In 1949, the Supreme Court observed in Terminiello v. Chicago that free speech 鈥渕ay indeed best serve its high purpose when it induces a condition of unrest . . . or even stirs people to anger. Speech is often provocative and challenging. It may strike at prejudices and preconceptions and have profound unsettling effects as it presses for acceptance of an idea.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

It鈥檚 speech, not censorship, that spurs profound change.

If schools like UConn, College of Charleston, CalPoly, and Furman truly want their students to learn about the harms of racial inequities on campus, censorship won鈥檛 work.

Censorship might temporarily quiet a controversy, but it does not 鈥渟trike at prejudices and preconceptions鈥 in a way necessary for true 鈥渁cceptance of an idea.鈥 Continued dialogue 鈥 about why such costumes may be worthy of rejection, for example 鈥 does. 

If colleges and universities want to bring about real change on their campuses, they would do well not to restrict free expression 鈥 one tool that can get the job done.


UPDATE: This post has been updated to include information about the College of Charleston. It was originally published Oct. 25.

Recent Articles

FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share