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The pen that makes thrones tremble

What happens when a writer becomes more dangerous to tyranny than an army?
In his Vicdan column for Literatur.Review (Abre numa nova janela), Abil Hasanov revisits Victor Hugo’s fearless confrontation with Napoleon III — and reminds us why dictators always fear literature, conscience, and language more than weapons. At a political moment like ours, the world once again desperately needs writers whose words can shake thrones, expose hypocrisy, and speak for those silenced by power — which perhaps also raises the uncomfortable question of why we no longer seem to produce figures like Hugo, and what exactly has changed: literature, society, courage, or us.
(Available in Arabic, English, French, German & Spanish)
https://literatur.review/en/column/vicdan/pen-makes-thrones-tremble

What happens when a writer becomes more dangerous to tyranny than an army?
In his Vicdan column for Literatur.Review, Abil Hasanov revisits Victor Hugo’s fearless confrontation with Napoleon III — and reminds us why dictators always fear literature, conscience, and language more than weapons. At a political moment like ours, the world once again desperately needs writers whose words can shake thrones, expose hypocrisy, and speak for those silenced by power — which perhaps also raises the uncomfortable question of why we no longer seem to produce figures like Hugo, and what exactly has changed: literature, society, courage, or us. (Abre numa nova janela)
Victor Hugo

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