"> Name: Student magazine confiscated and teacher fired

Date:  2006-present

Location:  North America

SubjectLanguage , Political/Economic/Social Opinion , Racial/Ethnic

MediumLiterature , Print Journalism , Personal Opinion


Artist: Professor Robert Ovetz and the students in his cultural studies class at the Art Institute of California - San Francisco.

Confronting Bodies: Administration at the Art Institute of California - San Francisco

Date of Action: December 2006

Specific Location: San Francisco, California

Description of Artwork: Mute/Off is a free literary magazine written and produced by the students of Robert Ovetz’s cultural studies class as their final project for the class at the Art Institute of California. The publication dealt with societal issues, green living, racism, and the cultural effects of video games. The magazine includes a collage of corporate logos that are overlaid with the words "Organized Crime", one of the logos was that of Goldman Sachs, which bought the school in 2006. One of the most controversial pieces in the magazine is a short story entitled "Homicide" written by Simone Mitchell, a third-year student who is African American. Mitchell's story chronicles the criminal exploits of three African American males who call each other "Niggaz" and are stereotyped as thugs. At the end of the story, it is revealed that they are characters in a video game being played by three which suburban boys.



Description of Incident: The day after the class produced magazine Mute/Off was distributed, the administration at the Art Institute of California immediately banned it, confiscating all copies of the publication. A spokeswoman for the school stated that the magazine produced as a final project for Prof. Ovetz's class was confiscated because it had been distributed without first being submited it to the administration for review.



Results of Incident: After objecteing to the administration's confiscation of the provocative and controversial student magazine, Prof. Ovetz was fired from his teaching position. Ovetz and the students claim that administration has violated the First Amendment, as well as a state law protecting student publication from censorship by confiscating nearly all 500 copies of the magazine. In addition, Ovetz and the students say this is not the first time the Art Institute has censored students work restricting freedom of speech and expression. One student's project was banned in December from a student exhibition on "taboos", and in 2005 a student's alien sculpture was removed from the campus gallery after complains that it looked like a vagina. The issue/debate surrounding the administration’s censorship of the magazine and the job termination of Prof. Ovetz has yet to be resolved.



Source: San Francisco Chronicle Information provided by Robert Ovetz and Art Institute of California - San Francisco students

Submitted By: National Coalition Against Censorship



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