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The lived experience of hundreds of thousands of people is becoming unspeakable, with self-censorship influencing what makes its way into our arts venues, writes Julia Farrington.

It’s easy to dismiss the importance of arts in a democracy; its social value is disregarded when it is seen as the province of the rich and privileged. Yet when we look to more authoritarian regimes across the globe Index is reminded constantly of the importance of the role of arts as a voice of dissent and the extraordinary amount of time that repressive states spend suppressing it. If the spoken or written word, if performance or image did not have power, then dictators wouldn’t spend so much time actively silencing and persecuting ar... Keep reading on Index on Censorship