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===Punishment=== [[File:Tyndale-martyrdom.png|thumb|Engraving depicting the death of [[William Tyndale]]]] The consequence of scandal for a writer may be censorship or discrediting of the work, or social ostracism of its creator. In some instances, punishment, persecution, or prison follow. The [[list of journalists killed in Europe]], [[list of journalists killed in the United States]] and the [[list of journalists killed in Russia]] are examples. Others include: * The [[Balibo Five]], a group of Australian television journalists who were killed while attempting to report on Indonesian incursions into [[Portuguese Timor]] in 1975. * [[Dietrich Bonhoeffer]] (1906β1945), an influential theologian who wrote ''[[The Cost of Discipleship]]'' and was hanged for his resistance to [[Nazism]]. * [[Galileo Galilei]] (1564β1642), who was sentenced to imprisonment for [[heresy]] as a consequence of writing in support of the then controversial theory of [[heliocentrism]], although the sentence was almost immediately commuted to [[house arrest]]. * [[Antonio Gramsci]] (1891β1937), who wrote political theory and criticism and was imprisoned for this by the Italian Fascist regime. * [[GΓΌnter Grass]] (1927β2015), whose poem "[[What Must Be Said]]" led to his being declared ''[[persona non grata]]'' in [[Israel]]. * [[Peter Greste]] (born 1965), a journalist who was imprisoned in Egypt for news reporting which was "damaging to national security."<ref name=bbc-crisis>{{cite news |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-25546389 |title=Egypt crisis: Al-Jazeera journalists arrested in Cairo |work=BBC News |date=30 December 2013}}</ref> * [[Primo Levi]] (1919β1987) who, among many Jews imprisoned during World War II, wrote an account of his incarceration called ''[[If This Is a Man]]''. * [[Sima Qian]] (145 or 135 BC β 86 BC) who "successfully defended a vilified master from defamatory charges" and was given "the choice between [[castration]] or execution." He "became a eunuch and had to bury his own book ... in order to protect it from the authorities."<ref name=Battles>{{cite book|last=Battles|first=Matthew|title=Library β An Unquiet History|year=2003|publisher=William Heinemann|location=London|isbn=0-434-00887-7}}p40</ref> * [[Salman Rushdie]] (born 1947), whose novel ''[[The Satanic Verses]]'' was banned and burned internationally after causing [[The Satanic Verses controversy|such a worldwide storm]] that a [[Fatwa|fatwΔ]] was issued against him. Though Rushdie survived, numerous others were killed in incidents connected to the novel. * [[Roberto Saviano]] (born 1979), whose best-selling book ''[[Gomorrah (book)|Gomorrah]]'' provoked the Neapolitan [[Camorra]], annoyed [[Silvio Berlusconi]] and led to him receiving permanent police protection. * [[Simon Sheppard (activist)|Simon Sheppard]] (born 1957) who was imprisoned in the UK for [[inciting racial hatred]]. * [[Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn]] (1918β2008), who used his experience of imprisonment as the subject of his writing in ''[[One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich]]'' and ''[[Cancer Ward]]''βthe latter, while legally published in the Soviet Union, had to gain the approval of the [[Union of Soviet Writers|USSR Union of Writers]]. * [[William Tyndale]] ({{Circa|1494}} β 1536), who was executed because he translated the Bible into English.
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